Radiation research
-
Combined radiation-burn injury can occur in people exposed to nuclear explosions, nuclear accidents or radiological terrorist attacks. Using different combined radiation-burn injury animal models, the pathological mechanisms underlying combined radiation-burn injury and effective medical countermeasures have been explored for several years in China, mainly at our institute. Targeting key features of combined radiation-burn injury, several countermeasures have been developed. ⋯ Transfusion of irradiated (20 Gy) or stored (4°C, 7 days) blood improves the survival of allo-skin grafting and allo-bone marrow cells. In conclusion, as our understanding of the mechanisms of combined radiation-burn injury has progressed, new countermeasures have been developed for its treatment. Because of the complexity of its pathology and the difficulty in clinical management, further efforts are needed to improve the treatment of this kind of injury.
-
In light-ion radiation therapy, both the dose and the local energy spectrum, which is often characterized with the linear energy transfer (LET), must be considered. In treatment optimization, it is advantageous to use a radiobiological model that analytically accounts for both dose and LET for the ion type of interest. With such a model the biological effect can also be estimated for dose and LET combinations for which there are no observations in the underlying experimental data. ⋯ This LET-parameterized RCR model was fitted to published cell survival data for HSG and V79 cells irradiated with carbon ions and for T1 cells irradiated with helium ions. To test the robustness of the model, fittings to only a subset of the data were performed. Good agreement with the cell survival data was obtained, including survival data for LET values not used for model fitting, opening up the possibility of using the model in treatment planning for light ions.
-
Little is known about the direct biological effects of radiation on immature neurons, despite its relevance to the mental retardation caused by irradiation of the brains of fetuses and children. In this study, we investigated the effects of radiation using primary cultured hippocampal neuronal cells with exclusion of glial cells, focusing on cell survival and structural development. Primary neurons were prepared from the hippocampi of fetal rats at embryonic day 18 and cultured according to Banker's methods. ⋯ The number of TUNEL-positive neurons, which can be considered as undergoing apoptosis, increased significantly in a dose-dependent fashion at both 7 and 14 days after irradiation. The mean numbers of clusters of synaptic proteins on neural dendrites, which are considered to represent their developmental level, decreased dose-dependently at both 7 and 14 days after irradiation. These results suggest that radiation not only induces apoptosis but also produces structural defects in the surviving neurons that may directly suppress neural development.
-
Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) has been suggested to be a valuable method for characterizing the physiological microenvironment of tumors and thus a promising method for individualizing cancer treatment. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that valid parametric images of the tumor microenvironment can be obtained by pharmacokinetic analysis of DCE-MRI series. Cells of four human melanoma xenograft lines (A-07, D-12, R-18 and T-22) were used as preclinical models of human cancer. ⋯ Parametric images reflecting tumor blood perfusion and fractional volume of the extravascular extracellular space were obtained. The numerical values of the DCE-MRI-derived parameters were not significantly different from the absolute values of tumor blood perfusion or fractional volume of the extravascular extracellular space in any of the tumor lines. This study shows that DCE-MRI can provide valid quantitative parametric images of the tumor microenvironment in preclinical cancer models and thus supports the suggestion that DCE-MRI may be developed to be a clinically useful method for individualization of microenvironment-based cancer treatment, a possibility that merits increased clinical interest.
-
Somatostatin analogs ameliorate intestinal injury after localized irradiation. This study investigated whether SOM230, a novel, metabolically stable analog with broad receptor affinity, reduces intestinal injury and lethality in mice exposed to total-body irradiation (TBI). Male CD2F1 mice were exposed to 7-15 Gy TBI. ⋯ SOM230 enhances animal survival whether administration begins before or after TBI; i.e., it is effective both as a protector and as a mitigator. The mechanism likely involves reduction of intraluminal pancreatic enzymes. Because of its efficacy and favorable safety profile, SOM230 is a promising countermeasure against radiation and should undergo further development.