Xu P-T, Maidment B W, Antonic V, Jackson I L, Das S, Zodda A, Zhang X, Seal S, Vujaskovic Z
a Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201;
b Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908; and.
Radiat Res. 2016 May;185(5):516-26. doi: 10.1667/RR14261.1. Epub 2016 May 2.
Cerium oxide nanoparticles (CNPs) have a unique surface regenerative property and can efficiently control reactive oxygen/nitrogen species. To determine whether treatment with CNPs can mitigate the delayed effects of lung injury after acute radiation exposure, CBA/J mice were exposed to 15 Gy whole-thorax radiation. The animals were either treated with nanoparticles, CNP-18 and CNP-ME, delivered by intraperitoneal injection twice weekly for 4 weeks starting 2 h postirradiation or received radiation treatment alone. At the study's end point of 160 days, 90% of the irradiated mice treated with high-dose (10 μM) CNP-18 survived, compared to 10% of mice in the radiation-alone (P < 0.0001) and 30% in the low-dose (100 nM) CNP-18. Both low- and high-dose CNP-ME-treated irradiated mice showed increased survival rates of 40% compared to 10% in the radiation-alone group. Multiple lung functional parameters recorded by flow-ventilated whole-body plethysmography demonstrated that high-dose CNP-18 treatment had a significant radioprotective effect on lethal dose radiation-induced lung injury. Lung histology revealed a significant decrease (P < 0.0001) in structural damage and collagen deposition in mice treated with high-dose CNP-18 compared to the irradiated-alone mice. In addition, significant reductions in inflammatory response (P < 0.01) and vascular damage (P < 0.01) were observed in the high-dose CNP-18-treated group compared to irradiated-alone mice. Together, the findings from this preclinical efficacy study clearly demonstrate that CNPs have both clinically and histologically significant mitigating and protective effects on lethal dose radiation-induced lung injury.
氧化铈纳米颗粒(CNPs)具有独特的表面再生特性,能够有效控制活性氧/氮物种。为了确定CNPs治疗是否可以减轻急性辐射暴露后肺损伤的延迟效应,将CBA/J小鼠暴露于15 Gy的全胸辐射。这些动物要么在照射后2小时开始,每周两次腹腔注射纳米颗粒CNP-18和CNP-ME,共治疗4周,要么仅接受放射治疗。在160天的研究终点,接受高剂量(10 μM)CNP-18治疗的受辐照小鼠中有90%存活,而单纯放疗组小鼠的存活率为10%(P < 0.0001),低剂量(100 nM)CNP-18治疗组小鼠的存活率为30%。与单纯放疗组10%的存活率相比,低剂量和高剂量CNP-ME治疗的受辐照小鼠存活率均提高至40%。通过流量通气全身体积描记法记录的多个肺功能参数表明,高剂量CNP-18治疗对致死剂量辐射诱导的肺损伤具有显著的辐射防护作用。肺组织学检查显示,与单纯受辐照小鼠相比,接受高剂量CNP-18治疗的小鼠结构损伤和胶原沉积显著减少(P < 0.0001)。此外,与单纯受辐照小鼠相比,高剂量CNP-18治疗组的炎症反应(P < 0.01)和血管损伤(P < 0.01)也显著减轻。总之,这项临床前疗效研究的结果清楚地表明,CNPs对致死剂量辐射诱导的肺损伤具有临床和组织学上显著的减轻和保护作用。