Changes in apical organization of choroidal cells in rats adapted to spaceflight or head-down tilt

1996 
Structural changes observed in choroid plexuses from rats dissected aboard a space shuttle, on day 13 of an orbital flight (NASA STS-58 mission, SLS-2 Experiments) demonstrated that choroidal epithelial cells display a modified organization in a microgravitational environment. Results were compared with ultrastructural observations of choroid plexus from rats maintained under anti-orthostatic restraint (head-down tilt) for 14 days. In both experiment types, the main alterations observed by transmission electron microscopy, at the level of choroidal epithelial cells from the third and fourth ventricles, concerned the formation and the organization of apical microvilli, whereas pseudopod-like structures appeared. Immunocytochemical distribution of ezrin, a cytoskeletal protein involved in apical cell differentiation in choroid plexus, confirmed the structural alteration of microvilli in head-down tilted rats. Kinocilia tended to disappear from the apical surface, suggesting a partial loss of cell polarization. In addition, large amounts of clear vesicles were gathered in the apical cytoplasm of choroidal epithelial cells. Disorganization of apical microvilli, accumulations of apical vesicles and partial loss of cell polarity showed that long-stays in weightlessness induced alterations in the fine structure of choroid plexus, consistent with a marked reduction of cerebrospinal fluid production.
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