Institute of Medical Radiation Biology, University of Duisburg-Essen Medical School, Essen, Germany.
Institute of Medical Radiation Biology, University of Duisburg-Essen Medical School, Essen, Germany.
Cancer Lett. 2015 Jan 1;356(1):58-71. doi: 10.1016/j.canlet.2013.12.017. Epub 2013 Dec 24.
It is becoming increasingly clear that cells exposed to ionizing radiation (IR) and other genotoxic agents (targeted cells) can communicate their DNA damage response (DDR) status to cells that have not been directly irradiated (bystander cells). The term radiation-induced bystander effects (RIBE) describes facets of this phenomenon, but its molecular underpinnings are incompletely characterized. Consequences of DDR in bystander cells have been extensively studied and include transformation and mutation induction; micronuclei, chromosome aberration and sister chromatid exchange formation; as well as modulations in gene expression, proliferation and differentiation patterns. A fundamental question arising from such observations is why targeted cells induce DNA damage in non-targeted, bystander cells threatening thus their genomic stability and risking the induction of cancer. Here, we review and synthesize available literature to gather support for a model according to which targeted cells modulate as part of DDR their redox status and use it as a source to generate signals for neighboring cells. Such signals can be either small molecules transported to adjacent non-targeted cells via gap-junction intercellular communication (GJIC), or secreted factors that can reach remote, non-targeted cells by diffusion or through the circulation. We review evidence that such signals can induce in the recipient cell modulations of redox status similar to those seen in the originating targeted cell - occasionally though self-amplifying feedback loops. The resulting increase of oxidative stress in bystander cells induces, often in conjunction with DNA replication, the observed DDR-like responses that are at times strong enough to cause apoptosis. We reason that RIBE reflect the function of intercellular communication mechanisms designed to spread within tissues, or the entire organism, information about DNA damage inflicted to individual, constituent cells. Such responses are thought to protect the organism by enhancing repair in a community of cells and by eliminating severely damaged cells.
越来越明显的是,暴露于电离辐射(IR)和其他遗传毒性剂(靶细胞)的细胞可以将其 DNA 损伤反应(DDR)状态传递给未直接照射的细胞(旁观者细胞)。术语“辐射诱导的旁观者效应(RIBE)”描述了这种现象的各个方面,但它的分子基础尚未完全描述。旁观者细胞中 DDR 的后果已被广泛研究,包括转化和突变诱导;微核、染色体畸变和姐妹染色单体交换的形成;以及基因表达、增殖和分化模式的调节。从这些观察结果中产生的一个基本问题是,为什么靶细胞会在非靶、旁观者细胞中诱导 DNA 损伤,从而威胁其基因组稳定性并有可能诱导癌症。在这里,我们回顾和综合现有文献,以支持一种模型,即靶细胞在 DDR 过程中调节其氧化还原状态,并将其用作产生邻近细胞信号的来源。这些信号可以是通过缝隙连接细胞间通讯(GJIC)运输到相邻非靶细胞的小分子,也可以是通过扩散或通过循环到达远处非靶细胞的分泌因子。我们回顾了证据表明,这种信号可以诱导受体细胞中氧化还原状态的调节类似于起源靶细胞中观察到的调节 - 偶尔通过自我放大反馈环。旁观者细胞中氧化应激的增加诱导 DDR 样反应,这种反应通常与 DNA 复制结合在一起,有时足以导致细胞凋亡。我们推断,RIBE 反映了细胞间通讯机制的功能,这些机制旨在在组织内或整个生物体中传播关于单个组成细胞所遭受的 DNA 损伤的信息。这些反应被认为通过增强细胞群体中的修复和消除严重受损的细胞来保护生物体。