Afshar Solmaz F, Zawaski Janice A, Inoue Taeko, Rendon David A, Zieske Arthur W, Punia Jyotinder N, Sabek Omaima M, Gaber M Waleed
a Department of Surgery, Houston Methodist Hospital Research Institute, Houston, Texas.
b Hematology-Oncology Section, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.
Radiat Res. 2017 Jul;188(1):56-65. doi: 10.1667/RR14692.1. Epub 2017 May 5.
The abscopal effect is the response to radiation at sites that are distant from the irradiated site of an organism, and it is thought to play a role in bone marrow (BM) recovery by initiating responses in the unirradiated bone marrow. Understanding the mechanism of this effect has applications in treating BM failure (BMF) and BM transplantation (BMT), and improving survival of nuclear disaster victims. Here, we investigated the use of multimodality imaging as a translational tool to longitudinally assess bone marrow recovery. We used positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and optical imaging to quantify bone marrow activity, vascular response and marrow repopulation in fully and partially irradiated rodent models. We further measured the effects of radiation on serum cytokine levels, hematopoietic cell counts and histology. PET/CT imaging revealed a radiation-induced increase in proliferation in the shielded bone marrow (SBM) compared to exposed bone marrow (EBM) and sham controls. T-weighted MRI showed radiation-induced hemorrhaging in the EBM and unirradiated SBM. In the EBM and SBM groups, we found alterations in serum cytokine and hormone levels and in hematopoietic cell population proportions, and histological evidence of osteoblast activation at the bone marrow interface. Importantly, we generated a BMT mouse model using fluorescent-labeled bone marrow donor cells and performed fluorescent imaging to reveal the migration of bone marrow cells from shielded to radioablated sites. Our study validates the use of multimodality imaging to monitor bone marrow recovery and provides evidence for the abscopal response in promoting bone marrow recovery after irradiation.
远隔效应是生物体对远离受照射部位的辐射产生的反应,人们认为它通过在未受照射的骨髓中引发反应来促进骨髓(BM)恢复。了解这种效应的机制在治疗骨髓衰竭(BMF)和骨髓移植(BMT)以及提高核灾难受害者的生存率方面具有应用价值。在此,我们研究了使用多模态成像作为一种转化工具来纵向评估骨髓恢复情况。我们使用正电子发射断层扫描/计算机断层扫描(PET/CT)、磁共振成像(MRI)和光学成像来量化完全和部分受照射的啮齿动物模型中的骨髓活性、血管反应和骨髓再填充情况。我们还进一步测量了辐射对血清细胞因子水平、造血细胞计数和组织学的影响。PET/CT成像显示,与暴露骨髓(EBM)和假手术对照组相比,受照射屏蔽骨髓(SBM)中辐射诱导的增殖增加。T2加权MRI显示EBM和未受照射的SBM中存在辐射诱导的出血。在EBM和SBM组中,我们发现血清细胞因子和激素水平以及造血细胞群体比例发生了变化,并且在骨髓界面处有成骨细胞激活的组织学证据。重要的是,我们使用荧光标记的骨髓供体细胞建立了一个BMT小鼠模型,并进行荧光成像以揭示骨髓细胞从屏蔽部位向放射性消融部位的迁移。我们的研究验证了使用多模态成像来监测骨髓恢复,并为远隔效应在促进照射后骨髓恢复中的作用提供了证据。