Mitochondria-dependent signalling pathway are involved in the early process of radiation-induced bystander effects

被引:0
|
作者
S Chen
Y Zhao
W Han
G Zhao
L Zhu
J Wang
L Bao
E Jiang
A Xu
T K Hei
Z Yu
L Wu
机构
[1] Key Laboratory of Ion Beam Bioengineering,
[2] Institute of Plasma Physics,undefined
[3] Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
[4] Center for Radiological Research,undefined
[5] College of Physicians and Surgeons,undefined
[6] Columbia University,undefined
来源
British Journal of Cancer | 2008年 / 98卷
关键词
radiation-induced bystander effects; signalling pathway; mitochondrion; nitric oxide synthase;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Bystander effects induced by cytoplasmic irradiation have been reported recently. However, the mechanism(s) underlying, such as the functional role of mitochondria, is not clear. In the present study, we used either mtDNA-depleted (ρ0) AL or normal (ρ+) AL cells as irradiated donor cells and normal human skin fibroblasts as receptor cells in a series of medium transfer experiments to investigate the mitochondria-related signal process. Our results indicated that mtDNA-depleted cells or normal AL cells treated with mitochondrial respiratory chain function inhibitors had an attenuated γ-H2AX induction, which indicates that mitochondria play a functional role in bystander effects. Moreover, it was found that treatment of normal AL donor cells with specific inhibitors of NOS, or inhibitor of mitochondrial calcium uptake (ruthenium red) significantly decreased γ-H2AX induction and that radiation could stimulate cellular NO and O2•− production in irradiated ρ+ AL cells, but not in ρ0 AL cells. These observations, together with the findings that ruthenium red treatment significantly reduced the NO and O2•− levels in irradiated ρ+ AL cells, suggest that radiation-induced NO derived from mitochondria might be an intracellular bystander factor and calcium-dependent mitochondrial NOS might play an essential role in the process.
引用
收藏
页码:1839 / 1844
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mitochondria-dependent signalling pathway are involved in the early process of radiation-induced bystander effects
    Chen, S.
    Zhao, Y.
    Han, W.
    Zhao, G.
    Zhu, L.
    Wang, J.
    Bao, L.
    Jiang, E.
    Xu, A.
    Hei, T. K.
    Yu, Z.
    Wu, L.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2008, 98 (11) : 1839 - 1844
  • [2] Ionizing radiation-induced, mitochondria-dependent generation of reactive oxygen/nitrogen
    Leach, JK
    Van Tuyle, G
    Lin, PS
    Schmidt-Ullrich, R
    Mikkelsen, RB
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2001, 61 (10) : 3894 - 3901
  • [3] Radiation-induced bystander signalling in cancer therapy
    Prise, Kevin M.
    O'Sullivan, Joe M.
    NATURE REVIEWS CANCER, 2009, 9 (05) : 351 - 360
  • [4] MiR-21 is involved in radiation-induced bystander effects
    Xu, Shuai
    Ding, Nan
    Pei, Hailong
    Hu, Wentao
    Wei, Wenjun
    Zhang, Xurui
    Zhou, Guangming
    Wang, Jufang
    RNA BIOLOGY, 2014, 11 (09) : 1161 - 1170
  • [5] Radiation-induced bystander signalling in cancer therapy
    Kevin M. Prise
    Joe M. O'Sullivan
    Nature Reviews Cancer, 2009, 9 : 351 - 360
  • [6] The Role of Mitochondria in the Radiation-Induced Bystander Effect
    Rajendran, S.
    Harrison, S. H.
    Thomas, R. A.
    Tucker, J. D.
    ENVIRONMENTAL AND MOLECULAR MUTAGENESIS, 2010, 51 (07) : 724 - 724
  • [7] Radiation-induced bystander effects
    Stenerlöw, B
    ACTA ONCOLOGICA, 2006, 45 (04) : 373 - 374
  • [8] Radiation-induced bystander effect: Early process and rapid assessment
    Wang, Hongzhi
    Yu, K. N.
    Hou, Jue
    Liu, Qian
    Han, Wei
    CANCER LETTERS, 2015, 356 (01) : 137 - 144
  • [9] Radiation-induced bystander signalling in targeted glioma cells
    Shao, C
    Stewart, VC
    Folkard, M
    Michael, BD
    Prise, KM
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2004, 91 : S19 - S19
  • [10] Review of radiation-induced bystander effects
    Snyder, AR
    HUMAN & EXPERIMENTAL TOXICOLOGY, 2004, 23 (02) : 87 - 89