Abstract

Development of resistance upon exposure to small doses of ionizing radiation followed by higher doses is known as radiation-induced adaptive response (RIAR). Traditionally, the induction of the RIAR phenomenon at the cellular level has been examined in cell lines, animal models, and epidemiological studies where people live in high natural background radiation. The primary intention of the earlier studies was to corroborate the existence of RIAR and the mechanism involved in mediating the response surveyed by exposure to a low dose of radiation (<500 mGy) as priming dose toward the radiation protection point of view. However, the investigation has shifted the focus to understand the relevance of this phenomenon at clinically relevant set-ups (high doses in the order of Gy) and can be exploited during radiotherapy as RIAR is considered a mechanism for the development of radioresistance. Although the knowledge of molecular mechanisms at the cellular level has evolved significantly in multi-fractionated radiotherapy regimes, its relevance in developing radioresistance at low doses remains elusive. The authors recapitulate the existing knowledge on RIAR at cellular levels, specifically after low-dose exposure as an adaptive dose, and discussed its potential implications in clinical radiotherapy outcomes. Recent studies have contributed to understand the signaling molecules, pathways, and inhibitors to mitigate RIAR-mediated radiation resistance and persistent radio-tolerance at the cellular level. Monitoring the disease progression in tumor samples or liquid biopsies before, during, and after therapy with suitable biomarkers has been proposed as a strategy to translate the phenomena into clinical scenario.

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