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Genetic Dissection of the Spaceflight Transcriptome Responses in Plants: are some responses unnecessary?

Metadata Updated: April 24, 2025

Experimentation on the International Space Station has reached the stage where repeated and nuanced transcriptome studies are beginning to illuminate the structural and metabolic differences between plants grown in space compared to plants on the Earth. Genes that are important in setting up the spaceflight responses are being identified; their role in spaceflight physiological adaptation are increasingly understood and the fact that different genotypes adapt differently is recognized. However the basic question of whether these spaceflight responses are required for survival has yet to be posed and the fundamental notion that spaceflight responses may be non-adaptive has yet to be explored. Therefore the experiments presented here were designed to ask if portions of the plant spaceflight response can be genetically removed without causing loss of spaceflight survival and without causing increased stress responses. The CARA experiment compared the spaceflight transcriptome responses of two Arabidopsis ecotypes Col-0 and WS as well as that of a PhyD mutant of Col-0. When grown with the ambient light of the ISS phyD displayed a significantly reduced spaceflight transcriptome response compared to Col-0 suggesting that altering the activity of a single gene can actually improve spaceflight adaptation by reducing the transcriptome cost of physiological adaptation. The WS genotype showed an even simpler spaceflight transcriptome response in the ambient light of the ISS more broadly indicating that the plant genotype can be manipulated to reduce the transcriptome cost of plant physiological adaptation to spaceflight and suggesting that genetic manipulation might further reduce or perhaps eliminate the metabolic cost of spaceflight adaptation. When plants were germinated and then left in the dark on the ISS the WS genotype actually mounted a larger transcriptome response than Col-0 suggesting that the in-space light environment affects physiological adaptation which further implies that manipulating the local habitat can also substantially impact the metabolic cost of spaceflight adaptation.

Access & Use Information

Public: This dataset is intended for public access and use. License: us-pd

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Dates

Metadata Created Date January 31, 2023
Metadata Updated Date April 24, 2025
Data Update Frequency irregular

Metadata Source

Harvested from NASA Data.json

Additional Metadata

Resource Type Dataset
Metadata Created Date January 31, 2023
Metadata Updated Date April 24, 2025
Publisher National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Maintainer
Identifier nasa_genelab_GLDS-120_b3ak-mpt9
Data First Published 2021-05-21
Data Last Modified 2025-04-23
Category Earth Science
Public Access Level public
Data Update Frequency irregular
Bureau Code 026:00
Metadata Context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
Schema Version https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
Catalog Describedby https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
Harvest Object Id bd119a45-66c9-4602-b23d-07dd4fef4603
Harvest Source Id 58f92550-7a01-4f00-b1b2-8dc953bd598f
Harvest Source Title NASA Data.json
Homepage URL https://data.nasa.gov/dataset/genetic-dissection-of-the-spaceflight-transcriptome-responses-in-plants-are-some-responses
License http://www.usa.gov/publicdomain/label/1.0/
Program Code 026:005
Source Datajson Identifier True
Source Hash 59b567883b94c8e9a4367c3c2b8ac6c7ac2e95fb3b781ca0e75e20df3e1f075d
Source Schema Version 1.1

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