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Dose- and Ion-Dependent Effects in the Oxidative Stress Response to Space-Like Radiation Exposure in the Skeletal System

Space radiation may pose a risk to skeletal health during subsequent aging. Irradiation acutely stimulates bone remodeling in mice, although the long-term influence of space radiation on bone-forming potential (osteoblastogenesis) and possible adaptive mechanisms are not well understood. We hypothes...

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Autores principales: Alwood, Joshua S., Tran, Luan H., Schreurs, Ann-Sofie, Shirazi-Fard, Yasaman, Kumar, Akhilesh, Hilton, Diane, Tahimic, Candice G. T., Globus, Ruth K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5666799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28994728
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18102117
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author Alwood, Joshua S.
Tran, Luan H.
Schreurs, Ann-Sofie
Shirazi-Fard, Yasaman
Kumar, Akhilesh
Hilton, Diane
Tahimic, Candice G. T.
Globus, Ruth K.
author_facet Alwood, Joshua S.
Tran, Luan H.
Schreurs, Ann-Sofie
Shirazi-Fard, Yasaman
Kumar, Akhilesh
Hilton, Diane
Tahimic, Candice G. T.
Globus, Ruth K.
author_sort Alwood, Joshua S.
collection PubMed
description Space radiation may pose a risk to skeletal health during subsequent aging. Irradiation acutely stimulates bone remodeling in mice, although the long-term influence of space radiation on bone-forming potential (osteoblastogenesis) and possible adaptive mechanisms are not well understood. We hypothesized that ionizing radiation impairs osteoblastogenesis in an ion-type specific manner, with low doses capable of modulating expression of redox-related genes. 16-weeks old, male, C57BL6/J mice were exposed to low linear-energy-transfer (LET) protons (150 MeV/n) or high-LET (56)Fe ions (600 MeV/n) using either low (5 or 10 cGy) or high (50 or 200 cGy) doses at NASA’s Space Radiation Lab. Five weeks or one year after irradiation, tissues were harvested and analyzed by microcomputed tomography for cancellous microarchitecture and cortical geometry. Marrow-derived, adherent cells were grown under osteoblastogenic culture conditions. Cell lysates were analyzed by RT-PCR during the proliferative or mineralizing phase of growth, and differentiation was analyzed by imaging mineralized nodules. As expected, a high dose (200 cGy), but not lower doses, of either (56)Fe or protons caused a loss of cancellous bone volume/total volume. Marrow cells produced mineralized nodules ex vivo regardless of radiation type or dose; (56)Fe (200 cGy) inhibited osteoblastogenesis by more than 90% (5 weeks and 1 year post-IR). After 5 weeks, irradiation (protons or (56)Fe) caused few changes in gene expression levels during osteoblastogenesis, although a high dose (56)Fe (200 cGy) increased Catalase and Gadd45. The addition of exogenous superoxide dismutase (SOD) protected marrow-derived osteoprogenitors from the damaging effects of exposure to low-LET ((137)Cs γ) when irradiated in vitro, but had limited protective effects on high-LET (56)Fe-exposed cells. In sum, either protons or (56)Fe at a relatively high dose (200 cGy) caused persistent bone loss, whereas only high-LET (56)Fe increased redox-related gene expression, albeit to a limited extent, and inhibited osteoblastogenesis. Doses below 50 cGy did not elicit widespread responses in any parameter measured. We conclude that high-LET irradiation at 200 cGy impaired osteoblastogenesis and regulated steady-state gene expression of select redox-related genes during osteoblastogenesis, which may contribute to persistent bone loss.
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spelling pubmed-56667992017-11-09 Dose- and Ion-Dependent Effects in the Oxidative Stress Response to Space-Like Radiation Exposure in the Skeletal System Alwood, Joshua S. Tran, Luan H. Schreurs, Ann-Sofie Shirazi-Fard, Yasaman Kumar, Akhilesh Hilton, Diane Tahimic, Candice G. T. Globus, Ruth K. Int J Mol Sci Article Space radiation may pose a risk to skeletal health during subsequent aging. Irradiation acutely stimulates bone remodeling in mice, although the long-term influence of space radiation on bone-forming potential (osteoblastogenesis) and possible adaptive mechanisms are not well understood. We hypothesized that ionizing radiation impairs osteoblastogenesis in an ion-type specific manner, with low doses capable of modulating expression of redox-related genes. 16-weeks old, male, C57BL6/J mice were exposed to low linear-energy-transfer (LET) protons (150 MeV/n) or high-LET (56)Fe ions (600 MeV/n) using either low (5 or 10 cGy) or high (50 or 200 cGy) doses at NASA’s Space Radiation Lab. Five weeks or one year after irradiation, tissues were harvested and analyzed by microcomputed tomography for cancellous microarchitecture and cortical geometry. Marrow-derived, adherent cells were grown under osteoblastogenic culture conditions. Cell lysates were analyzed by RT-PCR during the proliferative or mineralizing phase of growth, and differentiation was analyzed by imaging mineralized nodules. As expected, a high dose (200 cGy), but not lower doses, of either (56)Fe or protons caused a loss of cancellous bone volume/total volume. Marrow cells produced mineralized nodules ex vivo regardless of radiation type or dose; (56)Fe (200 cGy) inhibited osteoblastogenesis by more than 90% (5 weeks and 1 year post-IR). After 5 weeks, irradiation (protons or (56)Fe) caused few changes in gene expression levels during osteoblastogenesis, although a high dose (56)Fe (200 cGy) increased Catalase and Gadd45. The addition of exogenous superoxide dismutase (SOD) protected marrow-derived osteoprogenitors from the damaging effects of exposure to low-LET ((137)Cs γ) when irradiated in vitro, but had limited protective effects on high-LET (56)Fe-exposed cells. In sum, either protons or (56)Fe at a relatively high dose (200 cGy) caused persistent bone loss, whereas only high-LET (56)Fe increased redox-related gene expression, albeit to a limited extent, and inhibited osteoblastogenesis. Doses below 50 cGy did not elicit widespread responses in any parameter measured. We conclude that high-LET irradiation at 200 cGy impaired osteoblastogenesis and regulated steady-state gene expression of select redox-related genes during osteoblastogenesis, which may contribute to persistent bone loss. MDPI 2017-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC5666799/ /pubmed/28994728 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18102117 Text en © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Alwood, Joshua S.
Tran, Luan H.
Schreurs, Ann-Sofie
Shirazi-Fard, Yasaman
Kumar, Akhilesh
Hilton, Diane
Tahimic, Candice G. T.
Globus, Ruth K.
Dose- and Ion-Dependent Effects in the Oxidative Stress Response to Space-Like Radiation Exposure in the Skeletal System
title Dose- and Ion-Dependent Effects in the Oxidative Stress Response to Space-Like Radiation Exposure in the Skeletal System
title_full Dose- and Ion-Dependent Effects in the Oxidative Stress Response to Space-Like Radiation Exposure in the Skeletal System
title_fullStr Dose- and Ion-Dependent Effects in the Oxidative Stress Response to Space-Like Radiation Exposure in the Skeletal System
title_full_unstemmed Dose- and Ion-Dependent Effects in the Oxidative Stress Response to Space-Like Radiation Exposure in the Skeletal System
title_short Dose- and Ion-Dependent Effects in the Oxidative Stress Response to Space-Like Radiation Exposure in the Skeletal System
title_sort dose- and ion-dependent effects in the oxidative stress response to space-like radiation exposure in the skeletal system
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5666799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28994728
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18102117
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