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PSUN16 Sublethal Hyperthermia Decreases Cellular Proliferation and Transiently Disrupts Steroidogenesis in Adrenal Cells

INTRODUCTION: Primary Aldosteronism is the most common cause of secondary hypertension. First-line treatment; adrenalectomy resects adrenal nodules and adjacent normal tissue, limiting suitability to those who present with unilateral disease. Use of thermal ablation represents an emerging approach a...

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Autores principales: Mullen, Nathan, Donlon, Padraig T, Duffy, Katen, Feely, Sarah, Warde, Kate M, Prakash, Punit, Dennedy, Michael Conall, O’Halloran, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9624721/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.250
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author Mullen, Nathan
Donlon, Padraig T
Duffy, Katen
Feely, Sarah
Warde, Kate M
Prakash, Punit
Dennedy, Michael Conall
O’Halloran, Martin
author_facet Mullen, Nathan
Donlon, Padraig T
Duffy, Katen
Feely, Sarah
Warde, Kate M
Prakash, Punit
Dennedy, Michael Conall
O’Halloran, Martin
author_sort Mullen, Nathan
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Primary Aldosteronism is the most common cause of secondary hypertension. First-line treatment; adrenalectomy resects adrenal nodules and adjacent normal tissue, limiting suitability to those who present with unilateral disease. Use of thermal ablation represents an emerging approach as a possible minimally invasive therapy for unilateral and bilateral disease, to target and disrupt hypersecreting aldosterone producing adenomas, while preserving adjacent normal adrenal cortex. Ablation involves heating tissue >50°C to induce cellular necrosis. Outside the core ablation zone, the transitional zone is an area exposed to variable temperatures between 37°C – 50°C. To understand the feasibility of precision ablation in the adrenal gland, we examined the effect of applying these temperatures to adrenocortical cells to identify i) the required temperature to effectively ablate adrenal cells ii) the extent of damage that may occur to surrounding healthy adrenal cells with exposure to transitional zone temperatures. METHODS: Steroidogenic adrenocortical cell lines, H295R and HAC15, were treated with hyperthermia (high precision water bath) at temperatures of 37, 42, 45, 48 and 50°C and steroidogenesis was subsequently stimulated using forskolin (10µM) and angiotensin II (10nM). Cell death (Propidium iodide staining by flow cytometry), proliferation (xCELLigence real-time cell analysis), protein expression (Western blot/qRT-PCR), and steroid secretion (HPLC-Mass spectrometry) were analysed immediately and 7-days post-treatment. RESULTS: Cell death occurred at 48°C and 50°C (p<0.05 vs 37°C control), but not 45°C, or 42°C. Sublethal hyperthermia (42°C and 45°C for 30 minutes) induced a heat shock response demonstrated by upregulation of HSP70 and HSP90. Proliferation was subsequently reduced over 7-days alongside a decrease in aldosterone and cortisol secretion (p<0.05), and reduced expression of steroidogenic enzymes (CYP11B1, CYP11B2, CYP11A1) 18-hours post treatment (p<0.05). Following 7-days sublethal hyperthermia, steroid secretion and steroidogenic enzymatic expression returned to baseline levels. CONCLUSION: Hyperthermia at 48°C and 50°C for 15 minutes is required for sustained cell death at 7-days post treatment. Sublethal hyperthermia, equivalent to that produced in the transitional zone during thermal ablation, produces a short-lived unsustained inhibition of steroidogenesis that recovers 7-days post treatment. Therefore, segmental adrenal sparing ablation is possible with recovery of transitional zone following ablation. This underlines the potential for precision technology development for bilateral adrenal ablation as definitive measure to treat PA caused by APA or Micronodular disease. Presentation: Sunday, June 12, 2022 12:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
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spelling pubmed-96247212022-11-14 PSUN16 Sublethal Hyperthermia Decreases Cellular Proliferation and Transiently Disrupts Steroidogenesis in Adrenal Cells Mullen, Nathan Donlon, Padraig T Duffy, Katen Feely, Sarah Warde, Kate M Prakash, Punit Dennedy, Michael Conall O’Halloran, Martin J Endocr Soc Adrenal INTRODUCTION: Primary Aldosteronism is the most common cause of secondary hypertension. First-line treatment; adrenalectomy resects adrenal nodules and adjacent normal tissue, limiting suitability to those who present with unilateral disease. Use of thermal ablation represents an emerging approach as a possible minimally invasive therapy for unilateral and bilateral disease, to target and disrupt hypersecreting aldosterone producing adenomas, while preserving adjacent normal adrenal cortex. Ablation involves heating tissue >50°C to induce cellular necrosis. Outside the core ablation zone, the transitional zone is an area exposed to variable temperatures between 37°C – 50°C. To understand the feasibility of precision ablation in the adrenal gland, we examined the effect of applying these temperatures to adrenocortical cells to identify i) the required temperature to effectively ablate adrenal cells ii) the extent of damage that may occur to surrounding healthy adrenal cells with exposure to transitional zone temperatures. METHODS: Steroidogenic adrenocortical cell lines, H295R and HAC15, were treated with hyperthermia (high precision water bath) at temperatures of 37, 42, 45, 48 and 50°C and steroidogenesis was subsequently stimulated using forskolin (10µM) and angiotensin II (10nM). Cell death (Propidium iodide staining by flow cytometry), proliferation (xCELLigence real-time cell analysis), protein expression (Western blot/qRT-PCR), and steroid secretion (HPLC-Mass spectrometry) were analysed immediately and 7-days post-treatment. RESULTS: Cell death occurred at 48°C and 50°C (p<0.05 vs 37°C control), but not 45°C, or 42°C. Sublethal hyperthermia (42°C and 45°C for 30 minutes) induced a heat shock response demonstrated by upregulation of HSP70 and HSP90. Proliferation was subsequently reduced over 7-days alongside a decrease in aldosterone and cortisol secretion (p<0.05), and reduced expression of steroidogenic enzymes (CYP11B1, CYP11B2, CYP11A1) 18-hours post treatment (p<0.05). Following 7-days sublethal hyperthermia, steroid secretion and steroidogenic enzymatic expression returned to baseline levels. CONCLUSION: Hyperthermia at 48°C and 50°C for 15 minutes is required for sustained cell death at 7-days post treatment. Sublethal hyperthermia, equivalent to that produced in the transitional zone during thermal ablation, produces a short-lived unsustained inhibition of steroidogenesis that recovers 7-days post treatment. Therefore, segmental adrenal sparing ablation is possible with recovery of transitional zone following ablation. This underlines the potential for precision technology development for bilateral adrenal ablation as definitive measure to treat PA caused by APA or Micronodular disease. Presentation: Sunday, June 12, 2022 12:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Oxford University Press 2022-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9624721/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.250 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Adrenal
Mullen, Nathan
Donlon, Padraig T
Duffy, Katen
Feely, Sarah
Warde, Kate M
Prakash, Punit
Dennedy, Michael Conall
O’Halloran, Martin
PSUN16 Sublethal Hyperthermia Decreases Cellular Proliferation and Transiently Disrupts Steroidogenesis in Adrenal Cells
title PSUN16 Sublethal Hyperthermia Decreases Cellular Proliferation and Transiently Disrupts Steroidogenesis in Adrenal Cells
title_full PSUN16 Sublethal Hyperthermia Decreases Cellular Proliferation and Transiently Disrupts Steroidogenesis in Adrenal Cells
title_fullStr PSUN16 Sublethal Hyperthermia Decreases Cellular Proliferation and Transiently Disrupts Steroidogenesis in Adrenal Cells
title_full_unstemmed PSUN16 Sublethal Hyperthermia Decreases Cellular Proliferation and Transiently Disrupts Steroidogenesis in Adrenal Cells
title_short PSUN16 Sublethal Hyperthermia Decreases Cellular Proliferation and Transiently Disrupts Steroidogenesis in Adrenal Cells
title_sort psun16 sublethal hyperthermia decreases cellular proliferation and transiently disrupts steroidogenesis in adrenal cells
topic Adrenal
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9624721/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.250
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