Abstract

Ionizing radiation has different biological effects according to dose and dose rate. In particular, the biological effect of low-dose radiation is unclear. Low-dose whole-body gamma irradiation activates immune responses in several ways. However, the effects and mechanism of low-dose radiation on allergic responses remain poorly understood. Previously, we reported that low-dose ionizing radiation inhibits mediator release in IgE-mediated RBL-2H3 mast cell activation. In this study, to have any physiological relevance, we investigated whether low-dose radiation inhibits allergic responses in activated human mast cells (HMC-1(5C6) and LAD2 cells), mouse models of passive cutaneous anaphylaxis and the late-phase cutaneous response. High-dose radiation induced cell death, but low-dose ionizing radiation of <0.5 Gy did not induce mast cell death. Low-dose ionizing radiation that did not induce cell death significantly suppressed mediator release from human mast cells (HMC-1(5C6) and LAD2 cells) that were activated by antigen-antibody reaction. To determine the inhibitory mechanism of mediator released by low-dose ionizing radiation, we examined the phosphorylation of intracellular signaling molecules such as Lyn, Syk, phospholipase Cγ, and protein kinase C, as well as the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i). The phosphorylation of signaling molecules and [Ca2+]i following stimulation of FcεRI receptors was inhibited by low dose ionizing radiation. In agreement with its in vitro effect, ionizing radiation also significantly inhibited inflammatory cells infiltration, cytokine mRNA expression (TNF-α, IL-4, IL-13), and symptoms of passive cutaneous anaphylaxis reaction and the late-phase cutaneous response in anti-dinitrophenyl IgE-sensitized mice. These results indicate that ionizing radiation inhibits both mast cell-mediated immediate- and delayed-type allergic reactions in vivo and in vitro.

Highlights

  • Since radiation was discovered, it has been used in a wide variety of areas including medical diagnosis, therapy, and industry

  • Effect of ionizing radiation on cell viability in human mast cells To examine the effect of ionizing radiation on cell viability, human mast cells (HMC-1(5C6) and LAD2 cells) were irradiated with 0 to 1 Gy and evaluated with the MTT assay (Fig 1A) to assess short-term viability and the colony formation assay to assess long-term viability (Fig 1B)

  • To examine whether ionizing radiation plays a role in IgE-dependent mast cell activation or regulates mediator release and inflammatory cytokine production, human mast cells (HMC-1(5C6) and LAD2 cells) were irradiated with different dose of ionizing radiation before a 30-min stimulation with antigen in anti-IgE sensitized cells and histamine, β-hexosaminidase, and TNF-α levels were determined

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Summary

Objectives

We examined the effects of low-dose ionizing radiation in human mast cell lines (HMC-1(5C6) and LAD2 cells) and cutaneous mouse models because the goal of this study was to analyze the system as a whole, rather than individual parts

Methods
Results
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