Abstract

Despite great advancement in our understanding of the biological response to ionising radiation in mammals, a number of pertinent questions remain unanswered. For instance, the mechanisms underlying the long-term effects of acute radiation in vivo still eludes us. Here we report that acute exposure to X-rays in male mice significantly affects their transcriptome. Using microarrays and miRNA-sequencing, we profiled the gene expression pattern in the brain, the kidney, the liver and the sperm of irradiated and control from CBA/Ca and BALB/c in the timeline of 4 h, 24 h, 1 week and 10 weeks post-exposure. Acute exposure to 1 Gy of X-rays resulted in profound tissue- and strain-specific changes in gene expression pattern. There was profound change in the gene expression in the kidney of BALB/c irradiated mice over the period of 10 weeks after irradiation, whereas in the CBA/Ca strain the significant transcriptomic changes manifest over a shorter period of time up to 1 week post exposure. In the brain of irradiated CBA/Ca, significant changes in transcriptome were seen up to 10 weeks post-irradiation, while only short-term changes up to 4 h post-exposure was detected in the brain of irradiation BALB/c. Similarly, alteration in gene expression pattern was observed in the liver of irradiated BALB/c up to 10 weeks post-radiation, whereas only immediate but significant changes were observed in the CBA/Ca at 4 h post-irradiation. Furthermore, the analysis of miRNA in irradiated and control male mice also revealed highly tissue- and strain-specific changes in expression level, with no overlap between the differentially regulated miRNA genes across the three somatic tissues and the two inbred strains. We also analysed the pattern of miRNA expression in sperm of irradiated males, sacrificed at 24 h, 1 week and 10 weeks after irradiation. Only one miRNA (mmu-miR-217−5p) was significantly down-regulated in the CBA/Ca males. The results of our study may provide a plausible explanation for the delayed in vivo effects of irradiation.

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