Laboratory of Biomedical Technologies, Agenzia Nazionale per le Nuove Tecnologie, l'Energia e lo Sviluppo Economico Sostenibile (ENEA), Rome, Italy.
Department of Physics, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
Radiat Res. 2022 Jan 1;197(1):43-56. doi: 10.1667/RADE-20-00247.1.
Experimental mouse studies are important to gain a comprehensive, quantitative and mechanistic understanding of the biological factors that modify individual risk of radiation-induced health effects, including age at exposure, dose, dose rate, organ/tissue specificity and genetic factors. In this study, neonatal Ptch1+/- mice bred on CD1 and C57Bl/6 background received whole-body irradiation at postnatal day 2. This time point represents a critical phase in the development of the eye lens, cerebellum and dentate gyrus (DG), when they are also particularly susceptible to radiation effects. Irradiation was performed with γ rays (60Co) at doses of 0.5, 1 and 2 Gy, delivered at 0.3 Gy/min or 0.063 Gy/min. Wild-type and mutant mice were monitored for survival, lens opacity, medulloblastoma (MB) and neurogenesis defects. We identified an inverse genetic background-driven relationship between the radiosensitivity to induction of lens opacity and MB and that to neurogenesis deficit in Ptch1+/- mutants. In fact, high incidence of radiation-induced cataract and MB were observed in Ptch1+/-/CD1 mutants that instead showed no consequence of radiation exposure on neurogenesis. On the contrary, no induction of radiogenic cataract and MB was reported in Ptch1+/-/C57Bl/6 mice that were instead susceptible to induction of neurogenesis defects. Compared to Ptch1+/-/CD1, the cerebellum of Ptch1+/-/C57Bl/6 mice showed increased radiosensitivity to apoptosis, suggesting that differences in processing radiation-induced DNA damage may underlie the opposite strain-related radiosensitivity to cancer and non-cancer pathologies. Altogether, our results showed lack of dose-rate-related effects and marked influence of genetic background on the radiosensitivity of Ptch1+/-mice, supporting a major contribution of individual sensitivity to radiation risk in the population.
实验鼠研究对于全面、定量和机制性地了解改变个体辐射诱导健康效应风险的生物学因素非常重要,这些因素包括暴露时的年龄、剂量、剂量率、器官/组织特异性和遗传因素。在这项研究中,在出生后第 2 天,用 γ 射线(60Co)对在 CD1 和 C57Bl/6 背景下繁殖的新生 Ptch1+/- 小鼠进行全身照射。此时是眼睛晶状体、小脑和齿状回(DG)发育的关键阶段,它们也特别容易受到辐射效应的影响。照射剂量为 0.5、1 和 2 Gy,照射剂量率为 0.3 Gy/min 或 0.063 Gy/min。野生型和突变型小鼠的存活率、晶状体混浊、髓母细胞瘤(MB)和神经发生缺陷被监测。我们发现 Ptch1+/- 突变体对诱导晶状体混浊和 MB 的辐射敏感性与对神经发生缺陷的辐射敏感性之间存在一种反向遗传背景驱动的关系。事实上,Ptch1+/-/CD1 突变体中观察到辐射诱导白内障和 MB 的高发生率,而这些突变体的神经发生不受辐射暴露的影响。相反,Ptch1+/-/C57Bl/6 小鼠没有报告诱导性放射性白内障和 MB,但对神经发生缺陷敏感。与 Ptch1+/-/CD1 相比,Ptch1+/-/C57Bl/6 小鼠的小脑对细胞凋亡更敏感,这表明处理辐射诱导的 DNA 损伤的差异可能是导致不同菌株对癌症和非癌症病理的辐射敏感性差异的原因。总之,我们的研究结果表明缺乏剂量率相关效应和遗传背景对 Ptch1+/- 小鼠辐射敏感性的显著影响,支持个体对辐射风险的敏感性在人群中对辐射风险的主要贡献。