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Anti-ceramide antibody prevents the radiation gastrointestinal syndrome in mice

Authors :
Richard Kolesnick
Wadih Arap
Ming Qian
Marina Cardó-Vila
Jianjun Zhang
Renata Pasqualini
John D. Fuller
Adriana Haimovitz-Friedman
Xianglei Yin
Kisu Kim
Jimmy A. Rotolo
Zvi Fuks
Guoqiang Hua
Branka Stancevic
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. 122:1786-1790
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2012.

Abstract

Radiation gastrointestinal (GI) syndrome is a major lethal toxicity that may occur after a radiation/nuclear incident. Currently, there are no prophylactic countermeasures against radiation GI syndrome lethality for first responders, military personnel, or remediation workers entering a contaminated area. The pathophysiology of this syndrome requires depletion of stem cell clonogens (SCCs) within the crypts of Lieberkühn, which are a subset of cells necessary for postinjury regeneration of gut epithelium. Recent evidence indicates that SCC depletion is not exclusively a result of DNA damage but is critically coupled to ceramide-induced endothelial cell apoptosis within the mucosal microvascular network. Here we show that ceramide generated on the surface of endothelium coalesces to form ceramide-rich platforms that transmit an apoptotic signal. Moreover, we report the generation of 2A2, an anti-ceramide monoclonal antibody that binds to ceramide to prevent platform formation on the surface of irradiated endothelial cells of the murine GI tract. Consequently, we found that 2A2 protected against endothelial apoptosis in the small intestinal lamina propria and facilitated recovery of crypt SCCs, preventing the death of mice from radiation GI syndrome after high radiation doses. As such, we suggest that 2A2 represents a prototype of a new class of anti-ceramide therapeutics and an effective countermeasure against radiation GI syndrome mortality.

Details

ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ce6ac4da75dc47b1baa54062fe94a2e5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci59920