Xiao Xia, Luo Hongmei, Vanek Kenneth N, LaRue Amanda C, Schulte Bradley A, Wang Gavin Y
1Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina.
2Department of Hematology, Tianjin First Center Hospital, Tianjin, People's Republic of China.
Stem Cells Dev. 2015 Jun 1;24(11):1342-51. doi: 10.1089/scd.2014.0402. Epub 2015 Mar 3.
Hematologic toxicity is a major cause of mortality in radiation emergency scenarios and a primary side effect concern in patients undergoing chemo-radiotherapy. Therefore, there is a critical need for the development of novel and more effective approaches to manage this side effect. Catalase is a potent antioxidant enzyme that coverts hydrogen peroxide into hydrogen and water. In this study, we evaluated the efficacy of catalase as a protectant against ionizing radiation (IR)-induced toxicity in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). The results revealed that catalase treatment markedly inhibits IR-induced apoptosis in murine hematopoietic stem cells and hematopoietic progenitor cells. Subsequent colony-forming cell and cobble-stone area-forming cell assays showed that catalase-treated HSPCs can not only survive irradiation-induced apoptosis but also have higher clonogenic capacity, compared with vehicle-treated cells. Moreover, transplantation of catalase-treated irradiated HSPCs results in high levels of multi-lineage and long-term engraftments, whereas vehicle-treated irradiated HSPCs exhibit very limited hematopoiesis reconstituting capacity. Mechanistically, catalase treatment attenuates IR-induced DNA double-strand breaks and inhibits reactive oxygen species. Unexpectedly, we found that the radioprotective effect of catalase is associated with activation of the signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) signaling pathway and pharmacological inhibition of STAT3 abolishes the protective activity of catalase, suggesting that catalase may protect HSPCs against IR-induced toxicity via promoting STAT3 activation. Collectively, these results demonstrate a previously unrecognized mechanism by which catalase inhibits IR-induced DNA damage and apoptosis in HSPCs.
血液学毒性是辐射应急情况下死亡的主要原因,也是接受放化疗患者主要关注的副作用。因此,迫切需要开发新的、更有效的方法来应对这种副作用。过氧化氢酶是一种强大的抗氧化酶,可将过氧化氢转化为氢气和水。在本研究中,我们评估了过氧化氢酶作为一种保护剂对造血干细胞和祖细胞(HSPCs)电离辐射(IR)诱导毒性的效果。结果显示,过氧化氢酶处理显著抑制了小鼠造血干细胞和造血祖细胞中IR诱导的细胞凋亡。随后的集落形成细胞和平行卵石区形成细胞试验表明,与载体处理的细胞相比,过氧化氢酶处理的HSPCs不仅能在辐射诱导的细胞凋亡中存活,而且具有更高的克隆形成能力。此外,移植过氧化氢酶处理的受辐照HSPCs可导致高水平的多谱系和长期植入,而载体处理的受辐照HSPCs的造血重建能力非常有限。从机制上讲,过氧化氢酶处理可减轻IR诱导的DNA双链断裂并抑制活性氧。出乎意料的是,我们发现过氧化氢酶的辐射防护作用与信号转导和转录激活因子3(STAT3)信号通路的激活有关,STAT3的药理学抑制消除了过氧化氢酶的保护活性,这表明过氧化氢酶可能通过促进STAT3激活来保护HSPCs免受IR诱导的毒性。总的来说,这些结果证明了一种以前未被认识的机制,即过氧化氢酶抑制HSPCs中IR诱导的DNA损伤和细胞凋亡。