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1.
J Pathol ; 232(3): 289-99, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24254983

ABSTRACT

Since the early years of the twentieth century, the biological consequences of exposure to ionizing radiation have been attributed solely to mutational DNA damage or cell death induced in irradiated cells at the time of exposure. However, numerous observations have been at variance with this dogma. In the 1950s, attention was drawn to abscopal effects in areas of the body not directly irradiated. In the 1960s reports began appearing that plasma factors induced by irradiation could affect unirradiated cells, and since 1990 a growing literature has documented an increased rate of DNA damage in the progeny of irradiated cells many cell generations after the initial exposure (radiation-induced genomic instability) and responses in non-irradiated cells neighbouring irradiated cells (radiation-induced bystander effects). All these studies have in common the induction of effects not in directly irradiated cells but in unirradiated cells as a consequence of intercellular signalling. Recently, it has become clear that all the various effects demonstrated in vivo may reflect an ongoing inflammatory response to the initial radiation-induced injury that, in a genotype-dependent manner, has the potential to contribute primary and/or ongoing damage displaced in time and/or space from the initial insult. Importantly, there is direct evidence that non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug treatment reduces such damage in vivo. These new findings highlight the importance of tissue responses and indicate additional mechanisms of radiation action, including the likelihood that radiation effects are not restricted to the initiation stage of neoplastic diseases, but may also contribute to tumour promotion and progression. The various developments in understanding the responses to radiation exposures have implications not only for radiation pathology but also for therapeutic interventions.


Subject(s)
Radiation Injuries , Animals , Bystander Effect/physiology , Bystander Effect/radiation effects , Genomic Instability/physiology , Genomic Instability/radiation effects , Humans , Radiation, Ionizing
2.
Radiat Res ; 179(4): 406-15, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23578188

ABSTRACT

Radiation-induced bystander and abscopal effects, in which DNA damage is produced by inter-cellular communication, indicate mechanisms of generating damage in addition to those observed in directly irradiated cells. In this article, we show that the bone marrow of irradiated p53(+/+) mice, but not p53(-/-) mice, produces the inflammatory pro-apoptotic cytokines FasL and TNF-α able to induce p53-independent apoptosis in vitro in nonirradiated p53(-/-) bone marrow cells. Using a congenic sex-mismatch bone marrow transplantation protocol to generate chimeric mice, p53(-/-) hemopoietic cells functioning in a p53(+/+) bone marrow stromal microenvironment exhibited greater cell killing after irradiation than p53(-/-) hemopoietic cells in a p53(-/-) microenvironment. Cytogenetic analysis demonstrated fewer damaged p53(-/-) cells in a p53(+/+) microenvironment than p53(-/-) cells in a p53(-/-) microenvironment. Using the two different model systems, the findings implicate inflammatory tissue processes induced as a consequence of p53-dependent cellular responses to the initial radiation damage, producing cytokines that subsequently induce ongoing p53-independent apoptosis. As inactivation of the p53 tumor suppressor pathway is a common event in malignant cells developing in a stromal microenvironment that has normal p53 function, the signaling processes identified in the current investigations have potential implications for disease pathogenesis and therapy.


Subject(s)
Bone Marrow/radiation effects , Bystander Effect/radiation effects , Inflammation/etiology , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/physiology , Animals , Apoptosis/radiation effects , Bone Marrow/pathology , Cellular Microenvironment , Female , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/physiology
3.
Int J Radiat Biol ; 89(3): 139-46, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23078404

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: A study of irradiated (0.25-2 Gy) murine bone marrow has investigated the relationships between apoptotic responses of cells exposed in vivo and in vitro and between in vivo apoptosis and tissue cytotoxicity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The time course of reduction in bone marrow cellularity in vivo was determined by femoral cell counts and apoptosis measurements obtained using three commonly used assays. Inflammatory pro-apoptotic cytokine production at 24 h post-exposure in vivo was investigated using a bystander protocol. RESULTS: In vivo, there is a dose- and time-dependent non-linear reduction in bone marrow cellularity up to 24 h post- irradiation not directly represented by apoptosis measurements. The majority of cells are killed within 6 h but there is on-going cell loss in vivo up to 24 h post-irradiation in the absence of elevated levels of apoptosis and associated with the induction of cytokines produced in response to the initial tumor protein 53 (p53)-dependent apoptosis. CONCLUSION: The results demonstrate that small increases in measured apoptosis can reflect significant intramedullary cell death and with apoptotic processes being responsible for pro-inflammatory mechanisms that can contribute to additional on-going cell death. The findings demonstrate the importance of studying tissue responses when considering the mechanisms underlying the consequences of radiation exposures.


Subject(s)
Apoptosis/radiation effects , Bone Marrow Cells/pathology , Bone Marrow Cells/radiation effects , Animals , Bone Marrow Cells/immunology , Bystander Effect/radiation effects , Cytokines/biosynthesis , Cytotoxicity, Immunologic/radiation effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Gamma Rays/adverse effects , Genes, p53 , Inflammation Mediators/metabolism , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred CBA , Mice, Knockout , Signal Transduction/immunology , Signal Transduction/radiation effects , Translational Research, Biomedical
4.
Radiat Res ; 177(3): 244-50, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22149991

ABSTRACT

Radiation-induced bystander and abscopal effects, in which DNA damage is produced in nonirradiated cells as a consequence of communication with irradiated cells, indicate mechanisms of inducing damage and cell death additional to the conventional model of deposition of energy in the cell nucleus at the time of irradiation. In this study we show that signals generated in vivo in the bone marrow of mice irradiated with 4 Gy γ rays 18 h to 15 months previously are able to induce DNA damage and apoptosis in nonirradiated bone marrow cells but that comparable signals are not detected at earlier times postirradiation or at doses below 100 mGy. Bone marrow cells of both CBA/Ca and C57BL/6 genotypes exhibit responses to signals produced by either irradiated CBA/Ca or C57BL/6 mice, and the responses are mediated by the cytokines FasL and TNF-α converging on a COX-2-dependent pathway. The findings are consistent with indirect inflammatory signaling induced as a response to the initial radiation damage rather than to direct signaling between irradiated and nonirradiated cells. The findings also demonstrate the importance of studying tissue responses when considering the mechanisms underlying the consequences of radiation exposures.


Subject(s)
Bone Marrow Cells/cytology , Bone Marrow Cells/radiation effects , Bystander Effect/radiation effects , Inflammation/metabolism , Signal Transduction/radiation effects , Animals , Bone Marrow Cells/metabolism , DNA Damage , Inflammation/pathology , Male , Mice
5.
Radiat Res ; 177(1): 18-24, 2012 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22050452

ABSTRACT

Ionizing radiation is unequivocally leukemogenic and carcinogenic, and this is generally attributed to DNA damage arising as a consequence of deposition of energy in the cell nucleus at the time of exposure. However, nontargeted effects, in which DNA damage is produced in nonirradiated cells as a consequence of cell signaling processes, indicate additional mechanisms. Radiation-induced chromosomal instability, a nontargeted effect with the potential to produce pathological consequences, is characterized by an increased rate of chromosome aberrations many generations after the initial insult. In this study, using a mouse model that has been well characterized with respect to its susceptibility to both radiation-induced chromosomal instability and acute myeloid leukemia, we investigated whether the underlying signaling mechanism was an inflammatory process by studying the effects of a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Treated mice showed significant reduction in expression of the chromosomal instability phenotype 100 days postirradiation associated with reduced expression of inflammatory markers. The data support the hypothesis that the radiation-induced chromosomal instability phenotype is not an intrinsic property of the cells but a consequence of inflammatory processes having the potential to contribute secondary damage expressed as nontargeted and delayed radiation effects.


Subject(s)
Chromosomal Instability/genetics , Chromosomal Instability/radiation effects , Gene Expression Regulation/radiation effects , Animals , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/pharmacology , Biomarkers/metabolism , Bone Marrow/drug effects , Bone Marrow/metabolism , Bone Marrow/radiation effects , Celecoxib , Chromosomal Instability/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , Inflammation/genetics , Male , Mice , Pyrazoles/pharmacology , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Signal Transduction/genetics , Signal Transduction/radiation effects , Sulfonamides/pharmacology , Time Factors
6.
Cancer Res ; 71(20): 6485-91, 2011 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21903768

ABSTRACT

Ionizing radiation is carcinogenic, but genotype is a key determinant of susceptibility. Mutational DNA damage is generally attributed to cause disease, but irradiation also affects multicellular interactions as a result of poorly understood bystander effects that may influence carcinogenic susceptibility. In this study, we show that the bone marrow of irradiated mice will retain the ability to kill hemopoietic clonogenic stem cells and to induce chromosomal instability for up to 3 months after irradiation. Chromosomal instability was induced in bone marrow cells derived from CBA/Ca mice, a strain that is susceptible to radiation-induced acute myeloid leukemia (r-AML), but not in C57BL6 mice that are resistant to r-AML. Similarly, clonogenic cell lethality was exhibited in C57BL/6 mice but not CBA/Ca mice. Mechanistic investigations revealed that these genotype-dependent effects involved cytokine-mediated signaling and were mediated by a cyclooxygenase-2-dependent mechanism. Thus, our results suggested that inflammatory processes were responsible for mediating and sustaining the durable effects of ionizing radiation observed on bone marrow cells. Because most exposures to ionizing radiation are directed to only part of the body, our findings imply that genotype-directed tissue responses may be important determinants of understanding the specific consequence of radiation exposure in different individuals.


Subject(s)
Bone Marrow/radiation effects , Cytokines/metabolism , Inflammation/genetics , Animals , Bystander Effect/genetics , Bystander Effect/radiation effects , Chromosomal Instability/radiation effects , Cyclooxygenase 2/metabolism , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred CBA , Signal Transduction/genetics , Signal Transduction/radiation effects
7.
Radiat Res ; 175(3): 322-7, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21388275

ABSTRACT

Exposure to high doses of ionizing radiation unequivocally produces adverse health effects including malignancy. At low doses the situation is much less clear, because effects are generally too small to be estimated directly by epidemiology, and extrapolation of risk and establishment of international rules and standards rely on the linear no-threshold (LNT) concept. Claims that low doses are more damaging than would be expected from LNT have been made on the basis of in vitro studies of nontargeted bystander effects and genomic instability, but relevant investigations of primary cells and tissues are limited. Here we show that after low-dose low-LET in vivo radiation exposures in the 0-100-mGy range of murine bone marrow there is no evidence of a bystander effect, assessed by p53 pathway signaling, nor is there any evidence for longer-term chromosomal instability in the bone marrow at doses below 1000 mGy. The data are not consistent with speculations based on in vitro nontargeted effects that low-dose X radiation is more damaging than would be expected from linear extrapolation.


Subject(s)
Bone Marrow Cells/radiation effects , Radiation Dosage , Animals , Apoptosis/radiation effects , Bone Marrow Cells/cytology , Bone Marrow Cells/metabolism , Bystander Effect/radiation effects , Chromosomal Instability/radiation effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Linear Energy Transfer , Mice , Signal Transduction/radiation effects , Stress, Physiological/radiation effects , Time Factors , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/metabolism , X-Rays
8.
Radiat Res ; 173(6): 760-8, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20518655

ABSTRACT

Genetic lesions and cell death associated with exposure to ionizing radiation have generally been attributed to DNA damage arising as a consequence of deposition of energy in the cell nucleus. However, reports of radiation-induced bystander effects, in which DNA damage is produced in nonirradiated cells as a consequence of communication with irradiated cells, indicate additional mechanisms. At present, most information has been obtained using in vitro systems, and the in vivo significance of bystander factors is not clear. In this study we show that signals generated in vivo in the bone marrow of CBA/Ca mice irradiated with 4 Gy gamma rays 24 h previously, but not immediately postirradiation, are able to induce DNA damage and apoptosis in nonirradiated bone marrow cells. The signaling mechanism involves FasL, TNF-alpha, nitric oxide and superoxide and macrophages are implicated as a source of damaging signals. Such delayed bystander-type damage demonstrates the importance of studying tissue responses subsequent to the radiation exposure as well as effects at the time of irradiation when considering the mechanisms underlying the consequences of radiation exposures.


Subject(s)
Bone Marrow Cells/pathology , Bone Marrow Cells/radiation effects , Bystander Effect/radiation effects , Animals , Apoptosis/radiation effects , Bone Marrow Cells/metabolism , DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded/radiation effects , Fas Ligand Protein/metabolism , Macrophages/metabolism , Macrophages/radiation effects , Male , Mice , Nitric Oxide/metabolism , Signal Transduction/radiation effects , Superoxides/metabolism , Time Factors , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism
9.
Cancer Res ; 68(19): 8122-6, 2008 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18829571

ABSTRACT

The tumorigenic potential of ionizing radiation has conventionally been attributed to DNA damage in irradiated cells induced at the time of exposure. Recently, there have been an increasing number of reports of damage in unirradiated cells that are either neighbors or descendants of irradiated cells, respectively, regarded as bystander effects and genomic instability and collectively termed nontargeted effects. In this study, we show that descendants of normal murine hemaopoietic clonogenic stem cells exposed to bone marrow-conditioned medium derived from gamma-irradiated mice exhibit chromosomal instability unlike the descendants of directly gamma-irradiated cells. The instability is expressed in bone marrow cells of the radiation-induced acute myeloid leukemia (r-AML) susceptible strain (CBA/Ca) but not in mice resistant to r-AML (C57BL/6). Furthermore, crossgenetic experiments show the induction of the instability phenotype requires both the producer and responder cells to be of the susceptible CBA/Ca genotype. Macrophages are the source of the bystander signals, and the signaling mechanism involves tumor necrosis factor-alpha, nitric oxide, and superoxide. The findings show a genotype-dependent chromosomal instability phenotype induced by radiation-induced macrophage-mediated bystander signaling. As the majority of accidental, occupational, and therapeutic exposures to ionizing radiation are partial body exposures, the findings have implications for understanding the consequences of such exposure.


Subject(s)
Chromosomal Instability/physiology , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/metabolism , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/pathology , Macrophages/physiology , Macrophages/radiation effects , Animals , Bystander Effect/physiology , Bystander Effect/radiation effects , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Chromosomal Instability/radiation effects , Culture Media, Conditioned/pharmacology , Macrophages/metabolism , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred CBA , Models, Biological , Radiation, Ionizing , Tumor Stem Cell Assay
10.
Cancer Res ; 68(2): 450-6, 2008 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18199539

ABSTRACT

In addition to the directly mutagenic effects of energy deposition in DNA, ionizing radiation is associated with a variety of untargeted and delayed effects that result in ongoing bone marrow damage. Delayed effects are genotype dependent with CBA/Ca mice, but not C57BL/6 mice, susceptible to the induction of damage and also radiation-induced acute myeloid leukemia. Because macrophages are a potential source of ongoing damaging signals, we have determined their gene expression profiles and we show that bone marrow-derived macrophages show widely different intrinsic expression patterns. The profiles classify macrophages derived from CBA/Ca mice as M1-like (pro-inflammatory) and those from C57BL/6 mice as M2-like (anti-inflammatory); measurements of NOS2 and arginase activity in normal bone marrow macrophages confirm these findings. After irradiation in vivo, but not in vitro, C57BL/6 macrophages show a reduction in NOS2 and an increase in arginase activities, indicating a further M2 response, whereas CBA/Ca macrophages retain an M1 phenotype. Activation of specific signal transducer and activator of transcription signaling pathways in irradiated hemopoietic tissues supports these observations. The data indicate that macrophage activation is not a direct effect of radiation but a tissue response, secondary to the initial radiation exposure, and have important implications for understanding genotype-dependent responses and the mechanisms of the hemotoxic and leukemogenic consequences of radiation exposure.


Subject(s)
Bystander Effect/genetics , Macrophages/physiology , Macrophages/radiation effects , Animals , Cell Adhesion/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation/radiation effects , Genotype , Immunity/genetics , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred CBA , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Opsonin Proteins/genetics , Oxidative Stress/genetics , Radiation, Ionizing , Receptors, Scavenger/genetics , Signal Transduction
11.
Proteomics ; 5(16): 4254-63, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16196097

ABSTRACT

To characterize the mouse bone marrow tissue proteome and investigate the response to radiation damage we took bone marrow before and after 4-Gy gamma-irradiation from mouse strains (C57BL/6 and CBA/Ca) that differ in their short-term and long-term radiation responses and analyzed extracellular proteins by high-resolution 2-DE. Twenty proteins were identified from 71 protein spots in both C57BL/6 and CBA/Ca. We detected significant differences between control and irradiated bone marrow and between genotypes and identified many of the changed proteins by MS. In C57BL/6, 27 spots were significantly different between control and irradiated samples. In CBA/Ca, 18 spots showed significant changes following irradiation. Proteins such as serum albumin, apolipoprotein A-I, ferritin, haptoglobin (Hp) and alpha-1-antitrypsin were changed in irradiated bone marrow of both mouse strains, reflecting an ongoing acute-phase reaction. Several other proteins including serotransferrin, neutrophil collagenase, peroxiredoxin 2 and creatine kinase M chain were changed specifically in an individual mouse strain. The proteomic approach makes an important contribution to characterizing bone marrow proteome and investigating the tissue response of bone marrow to radiation, assists in identifying genotype-dependent responses and provides support for the importance of microenvironmental factors contributing to the overall response.


Subject(s)
Bone Marrow/metabolism , Gamma Rays , Proteome/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Bone Marrow/radiation effects , Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional , Mass Spectrometry , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred CBA , Molecular Sequence Data , Species Specificity
12.
Cancer Res ; 65(13): 5668-73, 2005 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15994940

ABSTRACT

Untargeted effects of ionizing radiation (de novo effects in the unirradiated descendants or neighbors of irradiated cells) challenge widely held views about the mechanisms of radiation-induced DNA damage with implications for the health consequences of radiation exposures particularly in the context of the induction of malignancy. To investigate in vivo untargeted effects of sparsely ionizing (low linear energy transfer) radiation, a congenic sex-mismatch bone marrow transplantation protocol has been used to repopulate the hemopoietic system from a mixture of gamma-irradiated and nonirradiated hemopoietic stem cells such that host-, irradiated donor- and unirradiated donor-derived cells can be distinguished. Chromosomal instability in the progeny of irradiated hemopoietic stem cells accompanied by a reduction in their contribution to the repopulated hemopoietic system is consistent with a delayed genomic instability phenotype being expressed in vivo. However, chromosomal instability was also shown in the progeny of the nonirradiated hemopoietic stem cells implicating a bystander mechanism. Studies of the influence of irradiated recipient stromal microenvironment and experiments replacing irradiated cells with irradiated cell-conditioned medium reveal the source of the in vivo bystander effect to be the descendants of irradiated cells, rather than irradiated cell themselves. Thus, it is possible that a radiation-induced genomic instability phenotype in vivo need not necessarily be a reflection of intrinsically unstable cells but the responses to ongoing production of inflammatory-type damaging signals as a long-term unexpected consequence of the initial single radiation exposure.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Aberrations , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/radiation effects , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/ultrastructure , Animals , Bone Marrow Transplantation , Cell Communication/genetics , Gamma Rays , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/cytology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred CBA
13.
Cancer Res ; 65(9): 3527-30, 2005 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15867342

ABSTRACT

Although it is well established that ionizing radiation and benzene are epidemiologically linked to acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the underlying mechanisms are not understood. We have shown that gamma-radiation can induce a persisting genomic instability in the clonal descendants of hemopoietic stem cells manifested as a high frequency of nonclonal chromosome and chromatid aberrations. A strikingly similar instability is shown after exposure to the benzene metabolite hydroquinone. The CBA/Ca but not the C57BL/6 genotype is susceptible to the induction of instability by both ionizing radiation and hydroquinone and exposure of CBA/Ca, but not C57BL/6, mice to either agent is known to be associated with the development of AML. The results are consistent with the proposal that chromosomal instability induced by either agent may contribute to AML development by increasing the number of genetic lesions in hemopoietic cells. Genotype-dependent chromosomal instability can be induced by hydroquinone doses that are not acutely stem cell toxic and this may have important implications for current assessment of safe levels of exposure to benzene as well as for mechanistic understanding of the hemotoxic and leukemogenic effects.


Subject(s)
Chromosomal Instability , Cocarcinogenesis , Gamma Rays/adverse effects , Hydroquinones/toxicity , Leukemia, Myeloid/etiology , Leukemia, Myeloid/genetics , Leukemia, Radiation-Induced/genetics , Acute Disease , Animals , Bone Marrow/drug effects , Bone Marrow/radiation effects , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/drug effects , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/radiation effects , Leukemia, Myeloid/chemically induced , Leukemia, Radiation-Induced/etiology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred CBA
14.
J Pathol ; 205(2): 221-35, 2005 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15643669

ABSTRACT

Cancers arise as a consequence of the accumulation of multiple genetic mutations in a susceptible cell, resulting in perturbation of regulatory networks that control proliferation, survival, and cellular function. Here, the sources of cellular stress that can cause oncogenic mutations and the responses of cells to DNA damage are reviewed. The role of different repair pathways and the potential for cell- and tissue-specific reliance on individual repair mechanisms are discussed. Evidence for cell- and tissue-specific activation of p53-mediated growth arrest and apoptosis after exposure to an individual genotoxin is assessed and some of the potential mediators of these different responses are provided. These cell- and tissue-specific responses to particular forms of DNA damage are likely to be key determinants of tissue-specific tumour susceptibility, and there is good evidence for genetic variations in these responses. The role that genotoxic agents play in altering the microenvironment to produce indirect effects on tumourigenesis through altered production of free radicals and cytokines that are characteristic of inflammatory-type processes is also evaluated. Changes to the microenvironment as direct or indirect effects of genotoxic stress can be involved in both tumour initiation and progression and may even be a prerequisite for tumourigenesis. Therefore, tumour susceptibility after endogenous or exogenous genotoxic stress represents a balance between cell-intrinsic responses of target cells and changes to the microenvironment. A fuller understanding of cell- and tissue-specific responses, alterations to the microenvironment, and genetic modifiers of these responses could lead to novel prevention and therapeutic strategies for common forms of human malignancy.


Subject(s)
Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/genetics , DNA Damage , Animals , Apoptosis/genetics , DNA Repair , Humans , Mice , Mutagens/pharmacology , Signal Transduction/genetics , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/physiology
15.
Mutat Res ; 568(1): 5-20, 2004 Dec 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15530535

ABSTRACT

The major adverse consequences of radiation exposures are attributed to DNA damage in irradiated cells that has not been correctly restored by metabolic repair processes. However, the dogma that genetic alterations are restricted to directly irradiated cells has been challenged by observations in which effects of ionizing radiation arise in non-irradiated cells. These, so called, untargeted effects are demonstrated in cells that are the descendants of irradiated cells either directly or via media transfer (radiation-induced genomic instability) or in cells that have communicated with irradiated cells (radiation-induced bystander effects). Radiation-induced genomic instability is characterized by a number of delayed responses including chromosomal abnormalities, gene mutations and cell death. Bystander effects include increases or decreases in damage-inducible and stress-related proteins, increases or decreases in reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, cell death or cell proliferation, cell differentiation, radioadaptation, induction of mutations and chromosome aberrations and chromosomal instability. The phenotypic expression of untargeted effects and the potential consequences of these effects in tissues reflect a balance between the type of bystander signals produced and the responses of cell populations to such signals, both of which may be significantly influenced by cell type and genotype. Thus, in addition to targeted effects of damage induced directly in cells by irradiation, a variety of untargeted effects may also make important short-term and long-term contributions to determining overall outcome after radiation exposures.


Subject(s)
Bystander Effect , Genomic Instability , Radiation, Ionizing , Signal Transduction/radiation effects , Animals , Cell Death , Chromosome Aberrations , Humans , Mutation
16.
J Pathol ; 201(3): 377-88, 2003 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14595749

ABSTRACT

Although little is understood of the underlying mechanisms, there are tissue-specific responses to tumourigenic and therapeutic agents and these responses are influenced by genetic factors. Ionizing radiation is an important tumourigenic and therapeutic agent for which there is substantial evidence for such tissue-dependent and genotype-dependent responses. Because the p53 tumour suppressor protein is a major determinant of cellular responses to radiation, the present study has investigated whether modification of the p53 pathway contributes to tissue-dependent and genotype-dependent responses using inbred strains of mice. Comparison of responses in haemopoietic and epithelial cells in irradiated C57BL/6 and DBA/2 mice revealed significant differences in p53 and apoptotic responses in different cell types and in different cells of the same type, reflecting the complexity of damage responses operating in the whole organism. The data suggest that p53-mediated up-regulation of Bax is a major determinant of apoptosis in the spleen, but not in the intestine, whereas p53-mediated induction of p21(waf1) plays an anti-apoptotic role in the spleen, but not in the intestine. It is also shown that p53 stabilization and differential transactivational activities towards Bax or p21(waf1) are influenced by genetic factors that act in a tissue-specific manner. Analysis of ATM, a potential mediator of differential p53 activation, indicates that this key regulator of radiation responses is preferentially induced in epithelial cells, but is unlikely to account for genetic modification of p53 or apoptotic responses in the mouse strains studied. Polymorphisms in the p53 or DNA-PKcs genes are also unlikely to account for the genetic modifications that are reported here. There are numerous further potential modifiers of the p53 pathway, but analysis of backcross and inter-cross mice demonstrates that genes responsible for the complex modification of these in vivo responses can be identified by linkage analysis. This approach has the potential to reveal new or unexpected interactions involving the p53 pathway that determine both short-term and long-term effects of radiation exposure and the basis of tissue-specific responses and tumour susceptibility.


Subject(s)
Neoplasm Proteins/analysis , Neoplasms/genetics , Radiation, Ionizing , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/analysis , Animals , Apoptosis/radiation effects , Disease Susceptibility , Epithelium/pathology , Epithelium/radiation effects , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Hematopoiesis , Immunohistochemistry/methods , Intestines/pathology , Intestines/radiation effects , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred DBA , Phosphorylation , Serine/analysis , Spleen/pathology , Spleen/radiation effects , Transcription, Genetic
17.
Oncogene ; 22(45): 7058-69, 2003 Oct 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14557811

ABSTRACT

The paradigm of genetic alterations being restricted to direct DNA damage after exposure to ionizing radiation has been challenged by observations in which cells that are not exposed to ionizing radiation exhibit responses typically associated with direct radiation exposure. These effects are demonstrated in cells that are the descendants of irradiated cells (radiation-induced genomic instability) or in cells that are in contact with irradiated cells or receive certain signals from irradiated cells (radiation-induced bystander effects). There is accumulating evidence that radiation-induced genomic instability may be a consequence of, and in some cell systems may also produce, bystander interactions involving intercellular signalling, production of cytokines and free-radical generation. These processes are also features of inflammatory responses that are known to have the potential for both bystander-mediated and persisting damage as well as for conferring a predisposition to malignancy. Thus, radiation-induced genomic instability and untargeted bystander effects may reflect inter-related aspects of inflammatory-type responses to radiation-induced stress and injury and contribute to the variety of pathological consequences of radiation exposures.


Subject(s)
Bystander Effect/radiation effects , DNA Damage , Genomic Instability/radiation effects , Animals , Genomic Instability/genetics , Humans , Inflammation/genetics , Models, Biological , Mutagens
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