Abstract

Radiotherapy is a widely used treatment option for cancer patients as well as for patients with musculoskeletal disorders. Adipocytes, the dominant cell type of adipose tissue, are known to constitute an active part of the tumor microenvironment. Moreover, adipocytes support inflammatory processes and cartilage degradation in chronic inflammatory diseases, i.e., rheumatoid and osteoarthritis. Since the production of inflammatory factors is linked to their differentiation stages, we set out to explore the radiation response of pre-adipocytes that may influence their inflammatory potential and differentiation capacity. This is the first study investigating the effects of X-ray irradiation on the proliferation and differentiation capacity of human primary pre-adipocytes, in comparison to Simpson–Golabi–Behmel Syndrome (SGBS) pre-adipocytes, an often-used in vitro model of human primary pre-adipocytes. Our results demonstrate a dose-dependent reduction of the proliferation capacity for both cell strains, whereas the potential for differentiation was mostly unaffected by irradiation. The expression of markers of adipogenic development, such as transcription factors (PPARγ, C/EBPα and C/EBPβ), as well as the release of adipokines (visfatin, adiponectin and leptin) were not significantly changed upon irradiation. However, after irradiation with high X-ray doses, an increased lipid accumulation was observed, which suggests a radiation-induced response of adipocytes related to inflammation. Our results indicate that pre-adipocytes are radio-resistant, and it remains to be elucidated whether this holds true for the overall inflammatory response of adipocytes upon irradiation.

Highlights

  • Growing evidence has been provided for an important role of adipose tissue as an active player in a variety of immunological and inflammatory processes [1,2]

  • Radiation-induced changes in the proliferation capacity were monitored in primary and in Simpson–Golabi–Behmel syndrome (SGBS) pre-adipocytes over 21 days

  • The increase in cell numbers for both cell types was lower compared to sham-irradiated controls, which was visible from day 12 on

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Summary

Introduction

Growing evidence has been provided for an important role of adipose tissue as an active player in a variety of immunological and inflammatory processes [1,2]. The fine regulation of the endocrine functions of adipose tissue leads to a chain reaction of pathological changes with respect to cell composition as well as expression and release of adipose tissue-specific factors [6,7,8]. The increased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines results in chronic low-grade inflammation and insulin resistance [9,10]. Both insulin resistance and dysregulation of the expression and release of key adipokines represent a core of systemic metabolic disorders and increase the risk of various serious diseases, including cancer and musculoskeletal diseases (MSD) [11,12]

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