• Title of article

    What can we learn from the toughest animals of the Earth? Water bears (tardigrades) as multicellular model organisms in order to perform scientific preparations for lunar exploration

  • Author/Authors

    Guidetti، نويسنده , , Roberto and Rizzo، نويسنده , , Angela Maria and Altiero، نويسنده , , Tiziana and Rebecchi، نويسنده , , Lorena، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    97
  • To page
    102
  • Abstract
    Space missions of long duration required a series of preliminary experiments on living organisms, validated by a substantial phase of ground simulation experiments, in the field of micro- and inter-mediate gravities, radiobiology, and, for planetary explorations, related to risks deriving from regolith and dust exposure. In this review, we present the tardigrades, whose characteristics that recommend them as an emerging model for space biology. They are microscopic animals but are characterized by a complex structural organization similar to that of larger animals; they can be cultured in lab in small facilities, having small size; they are able to produce clonal lineages by means of parthenogenesis; they can completely suspend their metabolism when entering in dormant states (anhydrobiosis induced by dehydration and cryobiosis induced by freezing); desiccated anhydrobiotic tardigrades are able to withstand chemical and physical extremes, but a large tolerance is showed also by active animals; they can be stored in dry state for many years without loss of viability. Tardigrades have already been exposed to space stressors on Low Earth Orbit several times. The relevance of ground-based and space studies on tardigrades rests on the presumption that results could suggest strategies to protect organisms, also humans, when exposed to the space and lunar environments.
  • Keywords
    Tardigrada , Lunar exploration , Space biology , Environmental extremes , anhydrobiosis
  • Journal title
    PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
  • Record number

    2315157