Targeting hippocampal neurogenesis to protect astronauts' cognition and mood from decline due to space radiation effects

Life Sci Space Res (Amst). 2022 Nov:35:170-179. doi: 10.1016/j.lssr.2022.07.007. Epub 2022 Jul 29.

Abstract

Neurogenesis is an essential, lifelong process during which neural stem cells generate new neurons within the hippocampus, a center for learning, memory, and mood control. Neural stem cells are vulnerable to environmental insults spanning from chronic stress to radiation. These insults reduce their numbers and diminish neurogenesis, leading to memory decline, anxiety, and depression. Preserving neural stem cells could thus help prevent these neurogenesis-associated pathologies, an outcome particularly important for long-term space missions where environmental exposure to radiation is significantly higher than on Earth. Multiple developments, from mechanistic discoveries of radiation injury on hippocampal neurogenesis to new platforms for the development of selective, specific, effective, and safe small molecules as neurogenesis-protective agents hold great promise to minimize radiation damage on neurogenesis. In this review, we summarize the effects of space-like radiation on hippocampal neurogenesis. We then focus on current advances in drug discovery and development and discuss the nuclear receptor TLX/NR2E1 (oleic acid receptor) as an example of a neurogenic target that might rescue neurogenesis following radiation.

Keywords: Drug discovery; Hippocampus; Neurogenesis; Space radiation; TLX/NR2E1 (oleic acid receptor).

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Astronauts*
  • Cognition
  • Hippocampus / pathology
  • Humans
  • Neurogenesis / physiology
  • Neurogenesis / radiation effects
  • Radiation Injuries* / prevention & control