Space Travel News  
Repair Shops For Broken DNA

An artist's concept of DNA battered by space radiation.
by Patrick L Barry
Houston TX (SPX) Nov 08, 2007
A stray bullet rips through the command center, blowing holes in vital equipment and damaging the data archives. Repair teams spring into action. The damage must be patched up quickly or the control systems could go haywire. It's literally a matter of life or death, and a decision must be made: try to fix the damage in place, or move the broken parts to the repair shop.

This is a drama that unfolds every day in the microscopic world inside the cells of astronauts. High-speed particles of space radiation zip through an astronaut's body. Occasionally, one of these particles will strike and break a strand of DNA. Because DNA carries a cell's genetic information and directs its behavior, broken DNA can make a cell grow out of control and even lead to cancer.

Fortunately, cells have teams of repair enzymes that try to fix this damage. Scientists have long thought that these enzymes always go to the site of injury and fix the DNA damage in place. But new research by Francis Cucinotta, the Chief Scientist for NASA's Space Radiation Program at the Johnson Space Center, and his colleagues suggests that cells might sometimes move broken DNA to special "repair shops" instead.

It's a new and controversial idea, Cucinotta says. "Scientists just didn't discuss this idea before. People assumed that the repair just happened right there where the damage occurred." And indeed, the research shows that some strands of DNA are repaired on the spot. Others, however, are relocated.

What's the difference? "I think it is the most damaged DNA that gets relocated," says Cucinotta.

If so, this relocation system might provide a way for scientists to distinguish between minor repairs and major ones. While cells can often fix minor DNA damage successfully, they sometimes botch major repairs. That can make the cell even more prone to becoming cancerous, so selectively blocking the relocated repairs could force a severely damaged cell to self-destruct rather than attempt to fix itself, thus keeping the astronaut healthier overall. "It may be better to let some cells die off that have been damaged," Cucinotta says.

To simulate space radiation, a team led by Sylvain Costes of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory exposed human cells grown in the lab to one of three radiation types: gamma rays, X-rays, and high-energy iron nuclei generated in the particle accelerator at NASA's Space Radiation Laboratory, a part of the Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, New York.

These iron nuclei closely resemble cosmic rays, the most dangerous form of space radiation and the most difficult kind to protect astronauts from. The experiments using iron nuclei provided the clearest evidence that cells might be moving broken DNA to repair centers. These high-speed particles blaze straight-line paths through cells. So spots of damage caused by a single iron nucleus should be along that straight path.

Yet that's not the pattern that Costes and his colleagues found when they analyzed images of real cells taken 10 minutes after the cells were irradiated. By attaching fluorescent molecules to some of the repair enzymes, the scientists could see green, glowing spots in the cells wherever DNA was being fixed. Rather than staying along the line where the damage occurred, these glowing spots seemed to congregate at other places within the cells.

"Often, we saw repairs happening near the boundary between the dense area containing all the chromosomes and the surrounding, emptier regions," Cucinotta explains.

Cells might move damaged portions here because it's easier, he suggests. DNA repair involves dozens of different enzymes. Rather than trying to gather all these enzymes at the damage site, it might be more efficient for cells to keep all these enzymes in discrete locations near the chromosomes and bring injured DNA to them.

"It's more likely to be an accurate repair that way," Cucinotta says. The transport mechanism that cells would use to move the DNA around remains unknown.

While the idea of DNA repair shops is fairly new, it's not without precedent. When bacteria duplicate their chromosomes, they do so by passing the DNA through a place in the cell called the origin of replication rather than sending the copy-machine enzymes to wherever the DNA happens to be.

If future research supports the repair-shop idea, the discovery could help NASA cope with the health threat posed to astronauts by radiation.

For one, understanding this relocation and repair system would let researchers improve computer programs they use to estimate space radiation health risks. Also, better knowledge of cells' repair mechanisms could potentially reveal new molecular targets for drugs that would someday improve astronauts' tolerance to radiation. And that would make the occasional bullet--or cosmic ray--a bit less alarming.

Related Links
Space Radiation Analysis Group
NASA Space Radiation Laboratory at Brookhaven
Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


NASA, NSBRI Select 17 Proposals In Space Radiation Research
Washington DC (SPX) Sep 26, 2007
The crews of future missions to the moon and Mars could face serious health risks from exposure to space radiation. NASA and the National Space Biomedical Research Institute, known as NSBRI, Houston, will fund 17 new research projects that will enable NASA to better understand and reduce those risks. Scientists at universities, research institutions and private companies in eight states will conduct the studies.







  • Kelly Space Launches Indoor Rocket Engine Test Service
  • Opportunity Studies Rock Composition And Changes In Atmosphere
  • SpaceDev Completes Milestone Under NASA Space Act Agreement
  • Outside View: Rocket revolutions -- Part 1

  • Arianespace's 5th Ariane 5 Mission Is Cleared For November 9 Liftoff
  • ESA To Provide Essential Launch Control Services To EUMETSAT
  • Skynet 5B Satellite Ready For Launch On 9th November
  • China May Use Long March 3 For Lunar Landing

  • Discovery's Return Marks Completion Of Esperia Mission
  • NASA's Space Shuttle Atlantis To Move To Launch Pad Saturday
  • Shuttle returns safely to Earth after complex mission
  • Good weather expected for shuttle landing Wednesday

  • Korean Astronaut To Ride On Soyuz April Flight With ISS Crew 17
  • Columbus Launch Puts Space Law To The Test
  • Space station repairs end in success
  • Space station's solar panel needs crucial repair

  • Repair Shops For Broken DNA
  • Spaceship Mockup
  • Malaysia may buy Russian space rocket
  • E'Prime Aerospace Receives Launch Site Policy Review Approval

  • China targets space station in 2020: report
  • China's Lunar Probe Completes Last Orbital Transfer Before Leaving Earth
  • China Starts Developing New Heavy-Duty Carrier Rockets
  • Outside View: China takes space race lead

  • Can A Robot Find A Rock. Interview With David Wettergreen: Part IV
  • Proton Rocket To Launch Glonass Satellites Friday
  • QinetiQ Establishes Service And Support Centre For Talon Robots In Australia
  • UCSD Researchers Give Computers Common Sense

  • Opportunity's Second Martian Birthday At Cape Verde
  • Mars Express Probes The Red Planet's Most Unusual Deposits
  • Spirit To Head North For The Winter
  • Opportunity Studies Bathtub Ring In Victoria

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement