In preclinical studies, the use of MSC-derived MVs is strongly associated with improved organ function following injury and may be useful for inhibiting tumor growth. Improved preclinical study quality in terms of treatment allocation reporting, randomization and blinding will accelerate needed progress towards clinical trials that should assess feasibility and safety of this therapeutic approach in humans.
This
paper reviews the contemporary evidence that radiation can accelerate
aging, degenerative health effects and mortality. Around the 1960s, the
idea that ionizing radiation caused premature aging was dismissed as the
radiation-induced
health effects appeared to be virtually confined to neoplasms. More
recently, radiation has become associated with a much wider spectrum of
age-related diseases, including cardiovascular disease; although some diseases
of old age, such as diabetes, are notably absent as a radiation risk. On
the basis of recent research, is there a stronger case today to be made
linking radiation and aging? Comparison is made between the
now-known biological mechanisms of aging and those of radiation, including
oxidative stress, chromosomal damage, apoptosis, stem cell exhaustion and
inflammation. The association between radiation effects and the
free-radical theory of aging as the causative hypothesis seems to be more
compelling than that between radiation and the nutrient-sensing TOR
pathway. Premature aging has been assessed by biomarkers in calorie
restriction studies; yet, biomarkers such as telomere erosion and p16INK4a
are ambiguous for radiation-induced aging. Some animal studies suggest low
dose radiation may even demonstrate hormesis health benefits. Regardless,
there is virtually no support for a life span extending hypothesis for
A-bomb survivors and other exposed subjects.
It has been more than 60 years since the discovery of the oxygen effect that empirically demonstrates the direct association between cell radiosensitivity and oxygen tension, important parameters in radiotherapy. Yet the mechanisms underlying this principal tenet of radiobiology are poorly understood. Better understanding of the oxygen effect may explain difficulty in eliminating hypoxic tumor cells, a major cause of regrowth after therapy. Our analysis utilizes the Howard-Flanders and Alper formula, which describes the relationship of radiosensitivity with oxygen tension. Here, we assign and qualitatively assess the relative contributions of two important mechanisms. The first mechanism involves the emission of reactive oxygen species from the mitochondrial electron transport chain, which increases with oxygen tension. The second mechanism is related to an energy and repair deficit, which increases with hypoxia. Following a radiation exposure, the uncoupling of the oxidative phosphorylation system (proton leak) in mitochondria lowers the emission of reactive oxygen species which has implications for fractionated radiotherapy, particularly of hypoxic tumors. Our analysis shows that, in oxygenated tumor and normal cells, mitochondria, rather than the nucleus, are the primary loci of radiotherapy effects, especially for low linear energy transfer radiation. Therefore, the oxygen effect can be explained by radiation-induced effects in mitochondria that generate reactive oxygen species, which in turn indirectly target nuclear DNA.
Our results support the notion of a bone marrow microenvironment characterized by increased propensity toward adipogenesis in AML, which may negatively impact normal hematopoiesis. Larger confirmatory studies are needed to understand the impact of various clinical factors. Novel leukemia treatments aimed at normalizing bone marrow niches may enhance the competitive advantage of normal hematopoietic progenitors over leukemia cells.
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