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"Many things that happen to flies in space also happen to humans in the long term"
An interview with Roberto Marco, scientist at the Institute of Biomedical Research (UAM/CSIC), in Madrid, Spain. Roberto Marco is head researcher for two experiments for the Cervantes Mission: AGEING and GENE. Roberto Marco is 62 years old and he has been sending his experiments into space since 1985. In his laboratory at UAM/CSIC he has investigated the processes involved in the ageing of the small fruit fly or Drosophila melanogast. The fruit fly is one of the organisms most loved by researchers because its genetics are well known. Scientists discovered that fruit flies and humans are genetically quite similar and what they know about one species offers clues about the other. What Marco really wants to do is "to put a population of flies into space and use them as detectors of the possible long-term effects on living beings." He adds: "We want to identify whether long-term exposure to the environment in space produces significant changes, either in the mechanisms that control development or in the processes of ageing." What is AGEING about? A: In previous experiments in weightlessness, we have seen that the longevity of flies decreased by about 30% when they returned to Earth. We concluded that, in space, flies change their behaviour and increase their motility, resulting in accelerated metabolism, production of more free radicals, and faster ageing. This is what we want to study now. We will experiment with various populations of flies: flies with long lifespans, flies with short lifespans, and flies that on Earth have shown themselves to be especially sensitive to gravity. All of them will be young, except a fourth group of two weeks in age. We want to test the fact that increased motility particularly affects young individuals. How can the lack of gravity make flies age? A: We know that when flies are stressed, and in space they probably are, they seek the highest point from which to escape. In space, they probably do not identify 'up' because of the lack of gravity and this means that their motility increases. We believe that mature flies are less affected because they must have another way of knowing where they are, based on learning. For this reason, one of the populations we are sending consists of adult flies, along with others that on Earth responded differently to gravity: moving downwards and not upwards.
How do the flies get to the Space Station?
What will happen during the experiment?
Is it possible to extrapolate to humans what is learnt from an experiment on the ageing of flies?
What about the other experiment, GENE, for which you are also Head research?
Is there any evidence that genetic expression alters in space?
What kinds of experiments would you like to do on the Columbus?
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