Abstract

The response of the brain to irradiation is complex, involving a multitude of stress inducible pathways that regulate neurotransmission within a dynamic microenvironment. While significant past work has detailed the consequences of CNS radiotherapy following relatively high doses (≥ 45 Gy), few studies have been conducted at much lower doses (≤ 2 Gy), where the response of the CNS (like many other tissues) may differ substantially from that expected from linear extrapolations of high dose data. Low dose exposure could elicit radioadaptive modulation of critical CNS processes such as neurogenesis, that provide cellular input into hippocampal circuits known to impact learning and memory. Here we show that mice deficient for chemokine signaling through genetic disruption of the CCR2 receptor exhibit a neuroprotective phenotype. Compared to wild type (WT) animals, CCR2 deficiency spared reductions in hippocampal neural progenitor cell survival and stabilized neurogenesis following exposure to low dose irradiation. While radiation-induced changes in microglia levels were not found in WT or CCR2 deficient animals, the number of Iba1+ cells did differ between each genotype at the higher dosing paradigms, suggesting that blockade of this signaling axis could moderate the neuroinflammatory response. Interestingly, changes in proinflammatory gene expression were limited in WT animals, while irradiation caused significant elevations in these markers that were attenuated significantly after radioadaptive dosing paradigms in CCR2 deficient mice. These data point to the importance of chemokine signaling under low dose paradigms, findings of potential significance to those exposed to ionizing radiation under a variety of occupational and/or medical scenarios.

Highlights

  • The central nervous system (CNS) is sensitive to a variety of insults that include trauma, ischemia, depression, chemotherapy and ionizing radiation

  • To evaluate the effects of 10 cGy priming and 2 Gy challenge LDIR on the yield of proliferating cells surviving in the hippocampus 1-month following irradiation, the number of BrdU positive cells was quantified in wild type (WT) and CCR2 knockout (CCR2-KO) mice (Fig 2)

  • Quantification of confocal micrographs indicated that compared to WT, CCR2 deficiency reduced significantly (48%, p = 0.05) the level of basal, newly born cell survival (0 Gy group) in the hippocampus (Fig 2E)

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Summary

Introduction

The central nervous system (CNS) is sensitive to a variety of insults that include trauma, ischemia, depression, chemotherapy and ionizing radiation. Low Dose Radiation Alters Hippocampal Microenvironment a global stress response impacting metabolism, DNA repair, cell cycle progression, and survival [1,2,3]. While the rise and fall of neurogenesis in response to specific stimuli has been a topic of intense investigation, little doubt exists regarding the capability of relatively higher doses ( 2 Gy) of ionizing radiation to inhibit this process [2,3,6]. Radiation inhibits neurogenesis via the depletion of radiosensitive populations of neural stem and progenitor cells (NSCs) residing in the sub-granular zone (SGZ) of the dentate gyrus (DG), thereby blocking the addition of new cells in the brain that contribute to hippocampal-dependent learning and memory. Other mechanisms regulate the inhibition and/or recovery of neurogenesis and include a variety of stress responsive of signaling mechanisms that impact the level of neuroinflammation [5, 8, 9]

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