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Synthetic Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside (LGM2605) Protects Human Lung in an Ex Vivo Model of Proton Radiation Damage

Radiation therapy for the treatment of thoracic malignancies has improved significantly by directing of the proton beam in higher doses on the targeted tumor while normal tissues around the tumor receive much lower doses. Nevertheless, exposure of normal tissues to protons is known to pose a substan...

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Autores principales: Velalopoulou, Anastasia, Chatterjee, Shampa, Pietrofesa, Ralph A., Koziol-White, Cynthia, Panettieri, Reynold A., Lin, Liyong, Tuttle, Stephen, Berman, Abigail, Koumenis, Constantinos, Christofidou-Solomidou, Melpo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5751128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29186841
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18122525
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author Velalopoulou, Anastasia
Chatterjee, Shampa
Pietrofesa, Ralph A.
Koziol-White, Cynthia
Panettieri, Reynold A.
Lin, Liyong
Tuttle, Stephen
Berman, Abigail
Koumenis, Constantinos
Christofidou-Solomidou, Melpo
author_facet Velalopoulou, Anastasia
Chatterjee, Shampa
Pietrofesa, Ralph A.
Koziol-White, Cynthia
Panettieri, Reynold A.
Lin, Liyong
Tuttle, Stephen
Berman, Abigail
Koumenis, Constantinos
Christofidou-Solomidou, Melpo
author_sort Velalopoulou, Anastasia
collection PubMed
description Radiation therapy for the treatment of thoracic malignancies has improved significantly by directing of the proton beam in higher doses on the targeted tumor while normal tissues around the tumor receive much lower doses. Nevertheless, exposure of normal tissues to protons is known to pose a substantial risk in long-term survivors, as confirmed by our work in space-relevant exposures of murine lungs to proton radiation. Thus, radioprotective strategies are being sought. We established that LGM2605 is a potent protector from radiation-induced lung toxicity and aimed in the current study to extend the initial findings of space-relevant, proton radiation-associated late lung damage in mice by looking at acute changes in human lung. We used an ex vivo model of organ culture where tissue slices of donor living human lung were kept in culture and exposed to proton radiation. We exposed donor human lung precision-cut lung sections (huPCLS), pretreated with LGM2605, to 4 Gy proton radiation and evaluated them 30 min and 24 h later for gene expression changes relevant to inflammation, oxidative stress, and cell cycle arrest, and determined radiation-induced senescence, inflammation, and oxidative tissue damage. We identified an LGM2605-mediated reduction of proton radiation-induced cellular senescence and associated cell cycle changes, an associated proinflammatory phenotype, and associated oxidative tissue damage. This is a first report on the effects of proton radiation and of the radioprotective properties of LGM2605 on human lung.
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spelling pubmed-57511282018-01-08 Synthetic Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside (LGM2605) Protects Human Lung in an Ex Vivo Model of Proton Radiation Damage Velalopoulou, Anastasia Chatterjee, Shampa Pietrofesa, Ralph A. Koziol-White, Cynthia Panettieri, Reynold A. Lin, Liyong Tuttle, Stephen Berman, Abigail Koumenis, Constantinos Christofidou-Solomidou, Melpo Int J Mol Sci Article Radiation therapy for the treatment of thoracic malignancies has improved significantly by directing of the proton beam in higher doses on the targeted tumor while normal tissues around the tumor receive much lower doses. Nevertheless, exposure of normal tissues to protons is known to pose a substantial risk in long-term survivors, as confirmed by our work in space-relevant exposures of murine lungs to proton radiation. Thus, radioprotective strategies are being sought. We established that LGM2605 is a potent protector from radiation-induced lung toxicity and aimed in the current study to extend the initial findings of space-relevant, proton radiation-associated late lung damage in mice by looking at acute changes in human lung. We used an ex vivo model of organ culture where tissue slices of donor living human lung were kept in culture and exposed to proton radiation. We exposed donor human lung precision-cut lung sections (huPCLS), pretreated with LGM2605, to 4 Gy proton radiation and evaluated them 30 min and 24 h later for gene expression changes relevant to inflammation, oxidative stress, and cell cycle arrest, and determined radiation-induced senescence, inflammation, and oxidative tissue damage. We identified an LGM2605-mediated reduction of proton radiation-induced cellular senescence and associated cell cycle changes, an associated proinflammatory phenotype, and associated oxidative tissue damage. This is a first report on the effects of proton radiation and of the radioprotective properties of LGM2605 on human lung. MDPI 2017-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC5751128/ /pubmed/29186841 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18122525 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
Velalopoulou, Anastasia
Chatterjee, Shampa
Pietrofesa, Ralph A.
Koziol-White, Cynthia
Panettieri, Reynold A.
Lin, Liyong
Tuttle, Stephen
Berman, Abigail
Koumenis, Constantinos
Christofidou-Solomidou, Melpo
Synthetic Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside (LGM2605) Protects Human Lung in an Ex Vivo Model of Proton Radiation Damage
title Synthetic Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside (LGM2605) Protects Human Lung in an Ex Vivo Model of Proton Radiation Damage
title_full Synthetic Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside (LGM2605) Protects Human Lung in an Ex Vivo Model of Proton Radiation Damage
title_fullStr Synthetic Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside (LGM2605) Protects Human Lung in an Ex Vivo Model of Proton Radiation Damage
title_full_unstemmed Synthetic Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside (LGM2605) Protects Human Lung in an Ex Vivo Model of Proton Radiation Damage
title_short Synthetic Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside (LGM2605) Protects Human Lung in an Ex Vivo Model of Proton Radiation Damage
title_sort synthetic secoisolariciresinol diglucoside (lgm2605) protects human lung in an ex vivo model of proton radiation damage
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5751128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29186841
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18122525
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