Kovalchuk Olga, Burke Paula, Besplug Jill, Slovack Mark, Filkowski Jody, Pogribny Igor
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Lethbridge, 4401 University Drive, Lethbridge, Alta., Canada T1K 3M4.
Mutat Res. 2004 Apr 14;548(1-2):75-84. doi: 10.1016/j.mrfmmm.2003.12.016.
The biological and genetic effects of chronic low-dose radiation (LDR) exposure and its relationship to carcinogenesis have received a lot of attention in the recent years. For example, radiation-induced genome instability, which is thought to be a precursor of tumorogenesis, was shown to have a transgenerational nature. This indicates a possible involvement of epigenetic mechanisms in LDR-induced genome instability. Genomic DNA methylation is one of the most important epigenetic mechanisms. Existing data on radiation effects on DNA methylation patterns is limited, and no one has specifically studied the effects of the LDR. We report the first study of the effects of whole-body LDR exposure on global genome methylation in muscle and liver tissues of male and female mice. In parallel, we evaluated changes in promoter methylation and expression of the tumor suppressor gene p16(INKa) and DNA repair gene O(6)-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT). We observed different patterns of radiation-induced global genome DNA methylation in the liver and muscle of exposed males and females. We also found sex and tissue-specific differences in p16(INKa) promoter methylation upon LDR exposure. In male liver tissue, p16(INKa) promoter methylation was more pronounced than in female tissue. In contrast, no significant radiation-induced changes in p16(INKa) promoter methylation were noted in the muscle tissue of exposed males and females. Radiation also did not significantly affect methylation status of MGMT promoter. We also observed substantial sex differences in acute and chronic radiation-induced expression of p16(INKa) and MGMT genes. Another important outcome of our study was the fact that chronic low-dose radiation exposure proved to be a more potent inducer of epigenetic effects than the acute exposure. This supports previous findings that chronic exposure leads to greater genome destabilization than acute exposure.
近年来,慢性低剂量辐射(LDR)暴露的生物学和遗传效应及其与致癌作用的关系受到了广泛关注。例如,辐射诱导的基因组不稳定被认为是肿瘤发生的前兆,已被证明具有跨代性质。这表明表观遗传机制可能参与了LDR诱导的基因组不稳定。基因组DNA甲基化是最重要的表观遗传机制之一。关于辐射对DNA甲基化模式影响的现有数据有限,且尚无专门研究LDR的影响。我们报告了第一项关于全身LDR暴露对雄性和雌性小鼠肌肉和肝脏组织全基因组甲基化影响的研究。同时,我们评估了肿瘤抑制基因p16(INKa)和DNA修复基因O(6)-甲基鸟嘌呤-DNA甲基转移酶(MGMT)启动子甲基化和表达的变化。我们观察到暴露的雄性和雌性小鼠肝脏和肌肉中辐射诱导的全基因组DNA甲基化模式不同。我们还发现LDR暴露后p16(INKa)启动子甲基化存在性别和组织特异性差异。在雄性肝脏组织中,p16(INKa)启动子甲基化比雌性组织更明显。相比之下,在暴露的雄性和雌性小鼠的肌肉组织中,未观察到辐射诱导的p16(INKa)启动子甲基化有显著变化。辐射也未显著影响MGMT启动子的甲基化状态。我们还观察到急性和慢性辐射诱导的p16(INKa)和MGMT基因表达存在显著的性别差异。我们研究的另一个重要结果是,事实证明慢性低剂量辐射暴露比急性暴露更能有效地诱导表观遗传效应。这支持了先前的研究结果,即慢性暴露比急性暴露导致更大的基因组不稳定。