Abstract

The embryonic brain is one of the tissues most vulnerable to ionizing radiation. In this study, we showed that ionizing radiation induces apoptosis in the neural progenitors of the mouse cerebral cortex, and that the surviving progenitor cells subsequently develop a considerable amount of supernumerary centrosomes. When mouse embryos at Day 13.5 were exposed to γ-rays, brains sizes were reduced markedly in a dose-dependent manner, and these size reductions persisted until birth. Immunostaining with caspase-3 antibodies showed that apoptosis occurred in 35% and 40% of neural progenitor cells at 4 h after exposure to 1 and 2 Gy, respectively, and this was accompanied by a disruption of the apical layer in which mitotic spindles were positioned in unirradiated mice. At 24 h after 1 Gy irradiation, the apoptotic cells were completely eliminated and proliferation was restored to a level similar to that of unirradiated cells, but numerous spindles were localized outside the apical layer. Similarly, abnormal cytokinesis, which included multipolar division and centrosome clustering, was observed in 19% and 24% of the surviving neural progenitor cells at 48 h after irradiation with 1 and 2 Gy, respectively. Because these cytokinesis aberrations derived from excess centrosomes result in growth delay and mitotic catastrophe-mediated cell elimination, our findings suggest that, in addition to apoptosis at an early stage of radiation exposure, radiation-induced centrosome overduplication could contribute to the depletion of neural progenitors and thereby lead to microcephaly.

Highlights

  • The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) recommends restricting the occupational radiation exposure of pregnant women because the embryo and the fetus are PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0158236 July 1, 2016Centrosomes and Radiation-Induced Microcephaly highly sensitive to ionizing radiation (IR) (ICRP60, 1990)

  • A high incidence of microcephaly caused by the lack of NBS1 or BRCA1 suggests that in addition to the unrepaired-double-strand breaks (DSBs)-mediated apoptosis pathway, other pathways are involved in the development of microcephaly [8]

  • Previous work has shown that exposure to irradiation at E13.5 in mouse, which corresponds to 9–15 weeks of gestation in human, most effectively influences the development of the cerebral cortex [1]

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Summary

Introduction

The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) recommends restricting the occupational radiation exposure of pregnant women because the embryo and the fetus are PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0158236 July 1, 2016Centrosomes and Radiation-Induced Microcephaly highly sensitive to ionizing radiation (IR) (ICRP60, 1990). With the exception of mice that lack Artemis, which exhibit normal brain development [8], mice that are deficient in nonhomologous end-joining proteins, including DNA ligase IV develop microcephaly through the unrepaired DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) that are generated during replication [4, 9]. This difference and the mild phenotype of the Artemis-deficient mice could be explained by the finding that the cells in these mice show repair kinetics similar to that of wild-type cells at least until 6 h after irradiation [9]. A high incidence of microcephaly caused by the lack of NBS1 or BRCA1 suggests that in addition to the unrepaired-DSB-mediated apoptosis pathway, other pathways are involved in the development of microcephaly [8]

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