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DNA Repair and Cell Cycle Biomarkers of Radiation Exposure and Inflammation Stress in Human Blood

DNA damage and repair are hallmarks of cellular responses to ionizing radiation. We hypothesized that monitoring the expression of DNA repair-associated genes would enhance the detection of individuals exposed to radiation versus other forms of physiological stress. We employed the human blood ex vi...

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Autores principales: Budworth, Helen, Snijders, Antoine M., Marchetti, Francesco, Mannion, Brandon, Bhatnagar, Sandhya, Kwoh, Ely, Tan, Yuande, Wang, Shan X., Blakely, William F., Coleman, Matthew, Peterson, Leif, Wyrobek, Andrew J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3492462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23144912
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048619
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author Budworth, Helen
Snijders, Antoine M.
Marchetti, Francesco
Mannion, Brandon
Bhatnagar, Sandhya
Kwoh, Ely
Tan, Yuande
Wang, Shan X.
Blakely, William F.
Coleman, Matthew
Peterson, Leif
Wyrobek, Andrew J.
author_facet Budworth, Helen
Snijders, Antoine M.
Marchetti, Francesco
Mannion, Brandon
Bhatnagar, Sandhya
Kwoh, Ely
Tan, Yuande
Wang, Shan X.
Blakely, William F.
Coleman, Matthew
Peterson, Leif
Wyrobek, Andrew J.
author_sort Budworth, Helen
collection PubMed
description DNA damage and repair are hallmarks of cellular responses to ionizing radiation. We hypothesized that monitoring the expression of DNA repair-associated genes would enhance the detection of individuals exposed to radiation versus other forms of physiological stress. We employed the human blood ex vivo radiation model to investigate the expression responses of DNA repair genes in repeated blood samples from healthy, non-smoking men and women exposed to 2 Gy of X-rays in the context of inflammation stress mimicked by the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Radiation exposure significantly modulated the transcript expression of 12 genes of 40 tested (2.2E-06<p<0.03), of which 8 showed no overlap between unirradiated and irradiated samples (CDKN1A, FDXR, BBC3, PCNA, GADD45a, XPC, POLH and DDB2). This panel demonstrated excellent dose response discrimination (0.5 to 8 Gy) in an independent human blood ex vivo dataset, and 100% accuracy for discriminating patients who received total body radiation. Three genes of this panel (CDKN1A, FDXR and BBC3) were also highly sensitive to LPS treatment in the absence of radiation exposure, and LPS co-treatment significantly affected their radiation responses. At the protein level, BAX and pCHK2-thr68 were elevated after radiation exposure, but the pCHK2-thr68 response was significantly decreased in the presence of LPS. Our combined panel yields an estimated 4-group accuracy of ∼90% to discriminate between radiation alone, inflammation alone, or combined exposures. Our findings suggest that DNA repair gene expression may be helpful to identify biodosimeters of exposure to radiation, especially within high-complexity exposure scenarios.
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spelling pubmed-34924622012-11-09 DNA Repair and Cell Cycle Biomarkers of Radiation Exposure and Inflammation Stress in Human Blood Budworth, Helen Snijders, Antoine M. Marchetti, Francesco Mannion, Brandon Bhatnagar, Sandhya Kwoh, Ely Tan, Yuande Wang, Shan X. Blakely, William F. Coleman, Matthew Peterson, Leif Wyrobek, Andrew J. PLoS One Research Article DNA damage and repair are hallmarks of cellular responses to ionizing radiation. We hypothesized that monitoring the expression of DNA repair-associated genes would enhance the detection of individuals exposed to radiation versus other forms of physiological stress. We employed the human blood ex vivo radiation model to investigate the expression responses of DNA repair genes in repeated blood samples from healthy, non-smoking men and women exposed to 2 Gy of X-rays in the context of inflammation stress mimicked by the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Radiation exposure significantly modulated the transcript expression of 12 genes of 40 tested (2.2E-06<p<0.03), of which 8 showed no overlap between unirradiated and irradiated samples (CDKN1A, FDXR, BBC3, PCNA, GADD45a, XPC, POLH and DDB2). This panel demonstrated excellent dose response discrimination (0.5 to 8 Gy) in an independent human blood ex vivo dataset, and 100% accuracy for discriminating patients who received total body radiation. Three genes of this panel (CDKN1A, FDXR and BBC3) were also highly sensitive to LPS treatment in the absence of radiation exposure, and LPS co-treatment significantly affected their radiation responses. At the protein level, BAX and pCHK2-thr68 were elevated after radiation exposure, but the pCHK2-thr68 response was significantly decreased in the presence of LPS. Our combined panel yields an estimated 4-group accuracy of ∼90% to discriminate between radiation alone, inflammation alone, or combined exposures. Our findings suggest that DNA repair gene expression may be helpful to identify biodosimeters of exposure to radiation, especially within high-complexity exposure scenarios. Public Library of Science 2012-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3492462/ /pubmed/23144912 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048619 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Budworth, Helen
Snijders, Antoine M.
Marchetti, Francesco
Mannion, Brandon
Bhatnagar, Sandhya
Kwoh, Ely
Tan, Yuande
Wang, Shan X.
Blakely, William F.
Coleman, Matthew
Peterson, Leif
Wyrobek, Andrew J.
DNA Repair and Cell Cycle Biomarkers of Radiation Exposure and Inflammation Stress in Human Blood
title DNA Repair and Cell Cycle Biomarkers of Radiation Exposure and Inflammation Stress in Human Blood
title_full DNA Repair and Cell Cycle Biomarkers of Radiation Exposure and Inflammation Stress in Human Blood
title_fullStr DNA Repair and Cell Cycle Biomarkers of Radiation Exposure and Inflammation Stress in Human Blood
title_full_unstemmed DNA Repair and Cell Cycle Biomarkers of Radiation Exposure and Inflammation Stress in Human Blood
title_short DNA Repair and Cell Cycle Biomarkers of Radiation Exposure and Inflammation Stress in Human Blood
title_sort dna repair and cell cycle biomarkers of radiation exposure and inflammation stress in human blood
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3492462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23144912
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048619
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