Li Wanshi, Pei Weiwei, Wang Yiwei, Nie Jing, Hu Guang, Zhang Yongsheng, Cao Zhifei, Chen Zaozao, Miao Keyan, Chen Yuqi, Shi Likai, Dai Yingchu, Liu Ning'ang, Pei Hailong, Ye Caiyong, Ali Yasser F, Hu Wentao, Yan Wenying, Zhou Guangming
Zhejiang Cancer Hospital, Hangzhou Institute of Medicine (HIM), Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hangzhou, China.
State Key Laboratory of Radiation Medicine and Protection, School of Radiation Medicine and Protection, Collaborative Innovation Center of Radiological Medicine of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions, Key Laboratory of Radiation Damage and Countermeasures of Jiangsu Provincial Universities and Colleges, Suzhou Medical College of Soochow University, Suzhou, China.
Br J Cancer. 2025 Sep 5. doi: 10.1038/s41416-025-03128-9.
In recent years, there has been a steady increase in professionals engaged in radioactive work. The biological impacts of long-term exposure to low dose-rate radiation remain elusive, as there is a dearth of systematic research in this field.
BEAS-2B cells were used to establish a cell model with continuous passaging after radiation exposure, which was subsequently subjected to in vivo tumorigenesis assays and in vitro malignant phenotype experiments. By scRNA-seq, we conducted copy number variation analysis, cell trajectory analysis, and cell communication analysis. Furthermore, we used FACS, molecular docking, multiplex immunohistochemistry, qRT-PCR, and co-immunoprecipitation to validate and further explore the molecular mechanisms driving tumor evolution.
Long-term low dose-rate exposure is associated with a higher degree of malignancy, as evidenced by the induction of more CNV and EMT events, as well as the delayed activation of DNA repair pathways, which trigger increased genomic instability. The long-term low dose-rate specific ligand-receptor pair, ANGPTL4-SDC4, enhances cell malignancy by promoting angiogenesis in newly formed lung tumor cells.
This study not only provides the first evidence and mechanistic explanation that long-term low dose-rate radiation leads to increased cellular malignancy but also offers valuable theoretical insights into the dynamic processes of early tumor evolution in lung cancer within the realm of tumor biology.
近年来,从事放射性工作的专业人员数量稳步增加。长期低剂量率辐射的生物学影响仍不明确,因为该领域缺乏系统研究。
使用BEAS-2B细胞建立辐射暴露后连续传代的细胞模型,随后进行体内成瘤试验和体外恶性表型实验。通过单细胞RNA测序,我们进行了拷贝数变异分析、细胞轨迹分析和细胞通讯分析。此外,我们使用荧光激活细胞分选术、分子对接、多重免疫组化、定量逆转录聚合酶链反应和免疫共沉淀来验证并进一步探索驱动肿瘤进展的分子机制。
长期低剂量率暴露与更高程度的恶性肿瘤相关,这表现为更多的拷贝数变异和上皮-间质转化事件的诱导,以及DNA修复途径的延迟激活,从而引发基因组不稳定性增加。长期低剂量率特异性配体-受体对ANGPTL4-SDC4通过促进新形成的肺肿瘤细胞中的血管生成来增强细胞恶性程度。
本研究不仅提供了长期低剂量率辐射导致细胞恶性程度增加的首个证据和机制解释,还为肿瘤生物学领域内肺癌早期肿瘤进展的动态过程提供了有价值的理论见解。