NASA Selects 12 Research Proposals in Radiation Biology

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Sept. 11, 2006

Michael Braukus/Beth Dickey 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1979/2087 

William Jeffs 
Johnson Space Center, Houston 
281-483-5111 

RELEASE: 06-313

NASA SELECTS 12 RESEARCH PROPOSALS IN RADIATION BIOLOGY

NASA will fund a dozen new research proposals to better understand and 
reduce the risks that crews of future moon and Mars missions could 
face from space radiation. The total potential value of the selected 
proposals is approximately $14 million. 

The health risks of radiation during space travel may include cancer, 
degenerative tissue damage -- including damage to the central nervous 
system -- and acute radiation sickness. The new research may help in 
the development of effective shielding or biological countermeasures 
for radiation exposure. 

The research is part of NASA's Space Radiation Program. The goal of 
the program is to assure astronauts can safely live and work in the 
space radiation environment, anywhere, anytime. Space radiation is 
different from forms of radiation encountered on Earth. Radiation in 
space consists of high-energy protons, heavy ions and secondary 
byproducts created when the protons and heavy ions pass through 
spacecraft shielding and human tissue. 

Since the data available on human exposure to these radiation types 
are limited, the risks of exposure are derived from an understanding 
based on radiation physics and radiation biology. The more research 
data collected, the more confident NASA can be that astronauts will 
be protected. 

The 12 new research areas were selected by the Space Radiation Program 
from 82 proposals received in response to a NASA Research 
Announcement. All of the proposals were peer-reviewed by scientific 
and technical experts from academia, government, and industry. 

The selected principal investigators, their organizations, and their 
proposal titles are: 

* Edouard Azzam, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, 
Newark, N.J., The Role of Gap-Junction Communication and Oxidative 
Metabolism in the Biological Effects of Space Radiation 

* Susan Bailey, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colo., 
Telomeric Proteins in the Radiation/DNA Damage Response 

* Richard Britten, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, Va., 
Proteomic Aided Investigation of the Mechanistic Basis For 
HZE-Induced Cognitive Impairment and the Development of Diagnostic 
Biomarkers 

* David Chen, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, 
Mechanisms of the Repair of HZE-Induced DNA Double-Strand Breaks in 
Human Cells 

* Albert Fornace, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mouse 
Models Approach for Intestinal Tumorigenesis Estimates by Space 
Radiation 

* Kathryn Held, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mechanisms for 
Induction of Bystander Effects by High Energy Particles in Cells and 
Tissues 

* Fiorenza Ianzini, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, Role of 
High-LET Radiation-Induced Mitotic Catastrophe in Mutagenesis: 
Implication for Carcinogenesis 

* Amy Kronenberg, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, 
Calif., Comparative Analysis of Charged Particle-Induced Autosomal 
Mutations in Murine Tissues and Cells 

* Bernard Rabin, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, 
Neurochemical and Behavioral Effects of Exposure to Heavy Particles 

* John Redpath, University of California Irvine, Irvine, Calif., High 
Energy Proton Dose-Rate and Mixed Field Effects on Neoplastic 
Transformation in vitro 

* Jerry Shay, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, 
Risk Assessment of Space Radiation-Enhanced Colon Tumorigenesis 

* Betsy Sutherland, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Long Island, N.Y., 
DNA Damage Clusters in Human Cell Transformation Induced by Single or 
Multiple Space Radiation Ion Exposures 

For information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/home

	
-end-



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