Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Macarena Parra is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Macarena Parra.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Space flight alters bacterial gene expression and virulence and reveals a role for global regulator Hfq

James W. Wilson; C. M. Ott; K. Höner zu Bentrup; Rajee Ramamurthy; L. Quick; Steffen Porwollik; Pui Cheng; Michael McClelland; George Tsaprailis; Timothy Radabaugh; Andrea M. Hunt; D. Fernandez; Emily Richter; Miti Shah; Michelle Kilcoyne; Lokesh Joshi; Mayra Nelman-Gonzalez; S. Hing; Macarena Parra; P. Dumars; Kelly Norwood; R. Bober; J. Devich; A. Ruggles; Carla Goulart; Mark Rupert; Louis S. Stodieck; P. Stafford; L. Catella; Michael J. Schurr

A comprehensive analysis of both the molecular genetic and phenotypic responses of any organism to the space flight environment has never been accomplished because of significant technological and logistical hurdles. Moreover, the effects of space flight on microbial pathogenicity and associated infectious disease risks have not been studied. The bacterial pathogen Salmonella typhimurium was grown aboard Space Shuttle mission STS-115 and compared with identical ground control cultures. Global microarray and proteomic analyses revealed that 167 transcripts and 73 proteins changed expression with the conserved RNA-binding protein Hfq identified as a likely global regulator involved in the response to this environment. Hfq involvement was confirmed with a ground-based microgravity culture model. Space flight samples exhibited enhanced virulence in a murine infection model and extracellular matrix accumulation consistent with a biofilm. Strategies to target Hfq and related regulators could potentially decrease infectious disease risks during space flight missions and provide novel therapeutic options on Earth.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Media ion composition controls regulatory and virulence response of Salmonella in spaceflight.

James W. Wilson; C. Mark Ott; Laura Quick; Richard Davis; Kerstin Höner zu Bentrup; Aurélie Crabbé; Emily Richter; Shameema Sarker; Jennifer Barrila; Steffen Porwollik; Pui Cheng; Michael McClelland; George Tsaprailis; Timothy Radabaugh; Andrea M. Hunt; Miti Shah; Mayra Nelman-Gonzalez; Steve Hing; Macarena Parra; Paula Dumars; Kelly Norwood; Ramona Bober; Jennifer Devich; Ashleigh Ruggles; Autumn Cdebaca; Satro Narayan; Joseph G. Benjamin; Carla Goulart; Mark Rupert; Luke Catella

The spaceflight environment is relevant to conditions encountered by pathogens during the course of infection and induces novel changes in microbial pathogenesis not observed using conventional methods. It is unclear how microbial cells sense spaceflight-associated changes to their growth environment and orchestrate corresponding changes in molecular and physiological phenotypes relevant to the infection process. Here we report that spaceflight-induced increases in Salmonella virulence are regulated by media ion composition, and that phosphate ion is sufficient to alter related pathogenesis responses in a spaceflight analogue model. Using whole genome microarray and proteomic analyses from two independent Space Shuttle missions, we identified evolutionarily conserved molecular pathways in Salmonella that respond to spaceflight under all media compositions tested. Identification of conserved regulatory paradigms opens new avenues to control microbial responses during the infection process and holds promise to provide an improved understanding of human health and disease on Earth.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Spaceflight Promotes Biofilm Formation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Wooseong Kim; Farah K. Tengra; Zachary Young; Jasmine Shong; Nicholas Marchand; Hon Kit Chan; Ravindra C. Pangule; Macarena Parra; Jonathan S. Dordick; Joel L. Plawsky; Cynthia H. Collins

Understanding the effects of spaceflight on microbial communities is crucial for the success of long-term, manned space missions. Surface-associated bacterial communities, known as biofilms, were abundant on the Mir space station and continue to be a challenge on the International Space Station. The health and safety hazards linked to the development of biofilms are of particular concern due to the suppression of immune function observed during spaceflight. While planktonic cultures of microbes have indicated that spaceflight can lead to increases in growth and virulence, the effects of spaceflight on biofilm development and physiology remain unclear. To address this issue, Pseudomonas aeruginosa was cultured during two Space Shuttle Atlantis missions: STS-132 and STS-135, and the biofilms formed during spaceflight were characterized. Spaceflight was observed to increase the number of viable cells, biofilm biomass, and thickness relative to normal gravity controls. Moreover, the biofilms formed during spaceflight exhibited a column-and-canopy structure that has not been observed on Earth. The increase in the amount of biofilms and the formation of the novel architecture during spaceflight were observed to be independent of carbon source and phosphate concentrations in the media. However, flagella-driven motility was shown to be essential for the formation of this biofilm architecture during spaceflight. These findings represent the first evidence that spaceflight affects community-level behaviors of bacteria and highlight the importance of understanding how both harmful and beneficial human-microbe interactions may be altered during spaceflight.


Astrobiology | 2011

The O/OREOS Mission: First Science Data from the Space Environment Survivability of Living Organisms (SESLO) Payload

Wayne L. Nicholson; Antonio J. Ricco; Elwood Agasid; Christopher Beasley; Millan Diaz-Aguado; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Charles Friedericks; Shakib Ghassemieh; Michael Henschke; John W. Hines; Christopher Kitts; Ed Luzzi; Diana Ly; Nghia Mai; Rocco L. Mancinelli; Michael McIntyre; Giovanni Minelli; Michael Neumann; Macarena Parra; Matthew Piccini; R. Mike Rasay; Robert Ricks; Orlando Santos; Aaron Schooley; David Squires; Linda Timucin; Bruce Yost; Anthony Young

We report the first telemetered spaceflight science results from the orbiting Space Environment Survivability of Living Organisms (SESLO) experiment, executed by one of the two 10 cm cube-format payloads aboard the 5.5 kg Organism/Organic Exposure to Orbital Stresses (O/OREOS) free-flying nanosatellite. The O/OREOS spacecraft was launched successfully to a 72° inclination, 650 km Earth orbit on 19 November 2010. This satellite provides access to the radiation environment of space in relatively weak regions of Earths protective magnetosphere as it passes close to the north and south magnetic poles; the total dose rate is about 15 times that in the orbit of the International Space Station. The SESLO experiment measures the long-term survival, germination, and growth responses, including metabolic activity, of Bacillus subtilis spores exposed to the microgravity, ionizing radiation, and heavy-ion bombardment of its high-inclination orbit. Six microwells containing wild-type (168) and six more containing radiation-sensitive mutant (WN1087) strains of dried B. subtilis spores were rehydrated with nutrient medium after 14 days in space to allow the spores to germinate and grow. Similarly, the same distribution of organisms in a different set of microwells was rehydrated with nutrient medium after 97 days in space. The nutrient medium included the redox dye Alamar blue, which changes color in response to cellular metabolic activity. Three-color transmitted intensity measurements of all microwells were telemetered to Earth within days of each of the 48 h growth experiments. We report here on the evaluation and interpretation of these spaceflight data in comparison to delayed-synchronous laboratory ground control experiments.


BMC Microbiology | 2013

Effect of spaceflight on Pseudomonas aeruginosa final cell density is modulated by nutrient and oxygen availability

Wooseong Kim; Farah K. Tengra; Jasmine Shong; Nicholas Marchand; Hon Kit Chan; Zachary Young; Ravindra C. Pangule; Macarena Parra; Jonathan S. Dordick; Joel L. Plawsky; Cynthia H. Collins

BackgroundAbundant populations of bacteria have been observed on Mir and the International Space Station. While some experiments have shown that bacteria cultured during spaceflight exhibit a range of potentially troublesome characteristics, including increases in growth, antibiotic resistance and virulence, other studies have shown minimal differences when cells were cultured during spaceflight or on Earth. Although the final cell density of bacteria grown during spaceflight has been reported for several species, we are not yet able to predict how different microorganisms will respond to the microgravity environment. In order to build our understanding of how spaceflight affects bacterial final cell densities, additional studies are needed to determine whether the observed differences are due to varied methods, experimental conditions, or organism specific responses.ResultsHere, we have explored how phosphate concentration, carbon source, oxygen availability, and motility affect the growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in modified artificial urine media during spaceflight. We observed that P. aeruginosa grown during spaceflight exhibited increased final cell density relative to normal gravity controls when low concentrations of phosphate in the media were combined with decreased oxygen availability. In contrast, when the availability of either phosphate or oxygen was increased, no difference in final cell density was observed between spaceflight and normal gravity. Because motility has been suggested to affect how microbes respond to microgravity, we compared the growth of wild-type P. aeruginosa to a ΔmotABCD mutant deficient in swimming motility. However, the final cell densities observed with the motility mutant were consistent with those observed with wild type for all conditions tested.ConclusionsThese results indicate that differences in bacterial final cell densities observed between spaceflight and normal gravity are due to an interplay between microgravity conditions and the availability of substrates essential for growth. Further, our results suggest that microbes grown under nutrient-limiting conditions are likely to reach higher cell densities under microgravity conditions than they would on Earth. Considering that the majority of bacteria inhabiting spacecrafts and space stations are likely to live under nutrient limitations, our findings highlight the need to explore the impact microgravity and other aspects of the spaceflight environment have on microbial growth and physiology.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Microgravity validation of a novel system for RNA isolation and multiplex quantitative real time PCR analysis of gene expression on the International Space Station

Macarena Parra; Jimmy Jung; Travis D. Boone; Luan Tran; Elizabeth A. Blaber; Mark R. Brown; Matthew Chin; Tori Chinn; Jacob Cohen; Robert Doebler; Dzung Hoang; Elizabeth Hyde; Matthew P. Lera; Louie T. Luzod; Mark Mallinson; Oana Marcu; Youssef Mohamedaly; Antonio J. Ricco; Kathleen H. Rubins; Gregory D. Sgarlato; Rafael O. Talavera; Peter Tong; Eddie Uribe; Jeffrey G. Williams; Diana Wu; Rukhsana Yousuf; Charles Scott Richey; Julie Schonfeld; Eduardo A. C. Almeida

The International Space Station (ISS) National Laboratory is dedicated to studying the effects of space on life and physical systems, and to developing new science and technologies for space exploration. A key aspect of achieving these goals is to operate the ISS National Lab more like an Earth-based laboratory, conducting complex end-to-end experimentation, not limited to simple microgravity exposure. Towards that end NASA developed a novel suite of molecular biology laboratory tools, reagents, and methods, named WetLab-2, uniquely designed to operate in microgravity, and to process biological samples for real-time gene expression analysis on-orbit. This includes a novel fluidic RNA Sample Preparation Module and fluid transfer devices, all-in-one lyophilized PCR assays, centrifuge, and a real-time PCR thermal cycler. Here we describe the results from the WetLab-2 validation experiments conducted in microgravity during ISS increment 47/SPX-8. Specifically, quantitative PCR was performed on a concentration series of DNA calibration standards, and Reverse Transcriptase-quantitative PCR was conducted on RNA extracted and purified on-orbit from frozen Escherichia coli and mouse liver tissue. Cycle threshold (Ct) values and PCR efficiencies obtained on-orbit from DNA standards were similar to Earth (1 g) controls. Also, on-orbit multiplex analysis of gene expression from bacterial cells and mammalian tissue RNA samples was successfully conducted in about 3 h, with data transmitted within 2 h of experiment completion. Thermal cycling in microgravity resulted in the trapping of gas bubbles inside septa cap assay tubes, causing small but measurable increases in Ct curve noise and variability. Bubble formation was successfully suppressed in a rapid follow-up on-orbit experiment using standard caps to pressurize PCR tubes and reduce gas release during heating cycles. The WetLab-2 facility now provides a novel operational on-orbit research capability for molecular biology and demonstrates the feasibility of more complex wet bench experiments in the ISS National Lab environment.


Acta Astronautica | 2014

The O/OREOS mission—Astrobiology in low Earth orbit

Pascale Ehrenfreund; Antonio J. Ricco; David Squires; Christopher Kitts; Elwood Agasid; Nathan Earl Bramall; Kathryn L. Bryson; Julie Diane Chittenden; Catharine A. Conley; Amanda Cook; Rocco L. Mancinelli; Andrew Mattioda; Wayne L. Nicholson; Richard C. Quinn; Orlando Santos; G. Tahu; M. Voytek; Chris Beasley; Laura Bica; Millan Diaz-Aguado; Charlie Friedericks; Mike Henschke; David Landis; Ed Luzzi; Diana Ly; Nghia Mai; Giovanni Minelli; Mike McIntyre; Michael Neumann; Macarena Parra


Archive | 2007

Flight Results from the GeneSat-1 Biological Microsatellite Mission

Christopher Kitts; Karolyn Ronzano; Richard Rasay; Ignacio Mas; Phelps Williams; Paul Mahacek; Giovanni Minelli; John W. Hines; Elwood Agasid; Charlie Friedericks; Matthew Piccini; Macarena Parra; Linda Timucin; Christopher Beasley; Mike Henschke; Ed Luzzi; Nghia Mai; Mike McIntyre; Robert Ricks; David Squires; Chris Storment; John Tucker; Bruce Yost; Greg Defouw; Antonio J. Ricco


Archive | 2009

Initial Flight Results from the PharmaSat Biological Microsatellite Mission

Christopher Kitts; Karolyn Ronzano; Richard Rasay; Ignacio Mas; Jose Acain; Michael Neumann; Laura Bica; Paul Mahacek; Giovanni Minelli; Erin Beck; Steve Li; Brian Gamp; Seamus Agnew; John Shepard; John W. Hines; Elwood Agasid; Charlie Friedericks; Matthew Piccini; Macarena Parra; Linda Timucin; Christopher Beasley; Mike Henschke; Ed Luzzi; Nghia Mai; Mike McIntyre; Robert Ricks; Antonio J. Ricco; David Squires; Greg Yost; Defouw


TRANSDUCERS 2007 - 2007 International Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems Conference | 2007

Autonomous Genetic Analysis System to Study Space Effects on Microorganisms: Results from Orbit

Antonio J. Ricco; John W. Hines; Matthew Piccini; Macarena Parra; Linda Timucin; V. Barker; Chris Storment; Charlie Friedericks; Elwood Agasid; Chris Beasley; Laurent Giovangrandi; Mike Henschke; Christopher Kitts; L. Levine; Ed Luzzi; Diana Ly; Ignacio Mas; M. Mclntyre; D. Oswell; Richard Rasay; Robert Ricks; Karolyn Ronzano; David Squires; G. Swaiss; John Tucker; Bruce Yost

Collaboration


Dive into the Macarena Parra's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ed Luzzi

Ames Research Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge