Mineyeva Olga A, Bezriadnov Dmitri V, Kedrov Alexander V, Lazutkin Alexander A, Anokhin Konstantin V, Enikolopov Grigori N
Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Dolgoprudny, Russia.
P. K. Anokhin Research Institute of Normal Physiology, Moscow, Russia.
Front Neurosci. 2019 Jan 9;12:1013. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2018.01013. eCollection 2018.
While irradiation can effectively treat brain tumors, this therapy also causes cognitive impairments, some of which may stem from the disruption of hippocampal neurogenesis. To study how radiation affects neurogenesis, we combine phenotyping of subpopulations of hippocampal neural stem and progenitor cells with double- and triple S-phase labeling paradigms. Using this approach, we reveal new features of division, survival, and differentiation of neural stem and progenitor cells after exposure to gamma radiation. We show that dividing neural stem cells, while susceptible to damage induced by gamma rays, are less vulnerable than their rapidly amplifying progeny. We also show that dividing stem and progenitor cells that survive irradiation are suppressed in their ability to replicate 0.5-1 day after the radiation exposure. Suppression of division is also observed for cells that entered the cell cycle after irradiation or were not in the S phase at the time of exposure. Determining the longer term effects of irradiation, we found that 2 months after exposure, radiation-induced suppression of division is partially relieved for both stem and progenitor cells, without evidence for compensatory symmetric divisions as a means to restore the normal level of neurogenesis. By that time, most mature young neurons, born 2-4 weeks after the irradiation, still bear the consequences of radiation exposure, unlike younger neurons undergoing early stages of differentiation without overt signs of deficient maturation. Later, 6 months after an exposure to 5 Gy, cell proliferation and neurogenesis are further impaired, though neural stem cells are still available in the niche, and their pool is preserved. Our results indicate that various subpopulations of stem and progenitor cells in the adult hippocampus have different susceptibility to gamma radiation, and that neurogenesis, even after a temporary restoration, is impaired in the long term after exposure to gamma rays. Our study provides a framework for investigating critical issues of neural stem cell maintenance, aging, interaction with their microenvironment, and post-irradiation therapy.
虽然辐射可以有效治疗脑肿瘤,但这种疗法也会导致认知障碍,其中一些可能源于海马神经发生的破坏。为了研究辐射如何影响神经发生,我们将海马神经干细胞和祖细胞亚群的表型分析与双相和三相S期标记范式相结合。使用这种方法,我们揭示了神经干细胞和祖细胞在暴露于伽马辐射后分裂、存活和分化的新特征。我们表明,正在分裂的神经干细胞虽然容易受到伽马射线诱导的损伤,但比其快速增殖的子代细胞更不易受损。我们还表明,在辐射暴露后0.5 - 1天,存活下来的正在分裂的干细胞和祖细胞的复制能力受到抑制。对于照射后进入细胞周期或在暴露时不在S期的细胞,也观察到了分裂抑制。在确定辐射的长期影响时,我们发现暴露后2个月,辐射诱导的分裂抑制对于干细胞和祖细胞都部分缓解,没有证据表明存在补偿性对称分裂作为恢复神经发生正常水平的一种方式。到那时,大多数在照射后2 - 4周产生的成熟年轻神经元仍然承受着辐射暴露的后果,这与处于分化早期且没有明显成熟缺陷迹象的较年轻神经元不同。后来,在暴露于5 Gy辐射6个月后,细胞增殖和神经发生进一步受损,尽管神经干细胞在生态位中仍然存在,并且它们的群体得以保留。我们的结果表明,成年海马体中干细胞和祖细胞的各种亚群对伽马辐射具有不同的敏感性,并且神经发生即使在暂时恢复后,在暴露于伽马射线后长期仍会受损。我们的研究为研究神经干细胞维持、衰老、与微环境的相互作用以及辐射后治疗的关键问题提供了一个框架。