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Re-Examination of the Exacerbating Effect of Inflammasome Components during Radiation Injury.

Authors :
Brickey, W. June
Thompson, Michael A.
Sheng, Zhecheng
Li, Zhiguo
Owzar, Kouros
Ting, Jenny P.Y.
Source :
Radiation Research; Feb2022, Vol. 197 Issue 2, p199-204, 6p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Radiation can be applied for therapeutic benefit against cancer or may result in devastating harm due to accidental or intentional release of nuclear energy. In all cases, radiation exposure causes molecular and cellular damage, resulting in the production of inflammatory factors and danger signals. Several classes of innate immune receptors sense the released damage associated molecules and activate cellular response pathways, including the induction of inflammasome signaling that impacts IL-1β/IL-18 maturation and cell death. A previous report indicated inflammasomes aggravate acute radiation syndrome. In contrast, here we find that inflammasome components do not exacerbate gamma-radiation-induced injury by examining heterozygous and gene-deletion littermate controls in addition to wild-type mice. Absence of some inflammasome genes, such as caspase-1/11 and Nlrp3, enhance susceptibility of treated mice to acute radiation injury, indicating importance of the inflammasome pathway in radioprotection. Surprisingly, we discover that the survival outcome may be sex-dependent as more inflammasome-deficient male mice are susceptible to radiation-induced injury. We discuss parameters that may influence the role of inflammasomes as radioprotective or radioexacerbating factors in recovery from radiation injury including the use of littermate controls, the sex of the animals, differences in microbiota within the colonies and other experimental conditions. Under the conditions tested, inflammasome components do not exacerbate radiation injury, but rather provide protective benefit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00337587
Volume :
197
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Radiation Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155000535
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1667/RADE-21-00142.1