Effects of spaceflight and simulated microgravity on microbial growth and secondary metabolism
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Effects of spaceflight and simulated microgravity on microbial growth and secondary metabolism
Military Medical ResearchVol. 5, Issue 4, Pages: 335-349(2018)
Affiliations:
1. Nanlou Respiratory Diseases Department, Chinese PLA General Hospital/Chinese PLA Postgraduate Medical School
2. State Key Laboratory of Microbial Resources, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author bio:
Funds:
DOI:
CLC:Q93
Published:2018
Accepted:
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[1]Bing Huang,Dian-Geng Li,Ying Huang,Chang-Ting Liu.Effects of spaceflight and simulated microgravity on microbial growth and secondary metabolism[J].Military Medical Research,2018,5(04):335-349.
DOI:
[1]Bing Huang,Dian-Geng Li,Ying Huang,Chang-Ting Liu.Effects of spaceflight and simulated microgravity on microbial growth and secondary metabolism[J].Military Medical Research,2018,5(04):335-349.DOI:
Effects of spaceflight and simulated microgravity on microbial growth and secondary metabolism
摘要
Abstract
Spaceflight and ground-based microgravity analog experiments have suggested that microgravity can affect microbial growth and metabolism. Although the effects of microgravity and its analogs on microorganisms have been studied for more than 50 years
plausible conflicting and diverse results have frequently been reported in different experiments
especially regarding microbial growth and secondary metabolism. Until now
only the responses of a few typical microbes to microgravity have been investigated; systematic studies of the genetic and phenotypic responses of these microorganisms to microgravity in space are still insufficient due to technological and logistical hurdles. The use of different test strains and secondary metabolites in these studies appears to have caused diverse and conflicting results. Moreover
subtle changes in the extracellular microenvironments around microbial cells play a key role in the diverse responses of microbial growth and secondary metabolisms. Therefore
"indirect" effects represent a reasonable pathway to explain the occurrence of these phenomena in microorganisms. This review summarizes current knowledge on the changes in microbial growth and secondary metabolism in response to spaceflight and its analogs and discusses the diverse and conflicting results. In addition
recommendations are given for future studies on the effects of microgravity in space on microbial growth and secondary metabolism.
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