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Divergent Molecular and Cellular Responses to Low and High-Dose Ionizing Radiation

Authors :
Bharath Sampadi
Sylvia Vermeulen
Branislav Mišovic
Jan J. Boei
Tanveer S. Batth
Jer-Gung Chang
Michelle T. Paulsen
Brian Magnuson
Joost Schimmel
Hanneke Kool
Cyriel S. Olie
Bart Everts
Alfred C. O. Vertegaal
Jesper V. Olsen
Mats Ljungman
Penny A. Jeggo
Leon H. F. Mullenders
Harry Vrieling
Source :
Cells, Vol 11, Iss 23, p 3794 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

Cancer risk after ionizing radiation (IR) is assumed to be linear with the dose; however, for low doses, definite evidence is lacking. Here, using temporal multi-omic systems analyses after a low (LD; 0.1 Gy) or a high (HD; 1 Gy) dose of X-rays, we show that, although the DNA damage response (DDR) displayed dose proportionality, many other molecular and cellular responses did not. Phosphoproteomics uncovered a novel mode of phospho-signaling via S12-PPP1R7, and large-scale dephosphorylation events that regulate mitotic exit control in undamaged cells and the G2/M checkpoint upon IR in a dose-dependent manner. The phosphoproteomics of irradiated DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) repair-deficient cells unveiled extended phospho-signaling duration in either a dose-dependent (DDR signaling) or independent (mTOR-ERK-MAPK signaling) manner without affecting signal magnitude. Nascent transcriptomics revealed the transcriptional activation of genes involved in NRF2-regulated antioxidant defense, redox-sensitive ERK-MAPK signaling, glycolysis and mitochondrial function after LD, suggesting a prominent role for reactive oxygen species (ROS) in molecular and cellular responses to LD exposure, whereas DDR genes were prominently activated after HD. However, how and to what extent the observed dose-dependent differences in molecular and cellular responses may impact cancer development remain unclear, as the induction of chromosomal damage was found to be dose-proportional (10–200 mGy).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734409
Volume :
11
Issue :
23
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Cells
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1d30103c56243f683bc88e1eec647e6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11233794