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Research Article

Delayed molecular responses to brain irradiation

Pages 45-53 | Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The chance of life-threatening complications occurring late after brain irradiation limits the efficacy of this form of cancer therapy. The molecular and cellular events that trigger radiation-induced brain damage are still unknown, but since they have the potential to serve as valuable targets for therapeutic intervention they are worth delineating. In this murine study, the effect of irradiation on the expression of molecules which are known to contribute to brain damage in other model systems was examined. Expression of genes encoding cytokines (TNF alpha / beta, IL-1 alpha / beta, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6 and IFN- gamma) , cytokine receptors (TNF-Rp55 and p75, IL-1R- p60 and p80, IFN- gamma R, and IL-6R), the cell adhesion molecule (ICAM-1), inducible nitric oxide synthetase (iNOS), anti-chymotrypsin (EB22/5.3), and the gliotic marker (GFAP) was evaluated over a 6-month period using a sensitive RNase protection assay (RPA). We had previously demonstrated that within 24 h of brain irradiation there is an acute transitory molecular response involving TNF alpha, IL-1, ICAM-1, EB22/5.3 and GFAP. This study shows re-elevation of TNF- alpha, EB22/5.3 and GFAP mRNA levels at 2-3 months, but only TNF- alpha mRNA was overexpressed at 6 months. These time points are when neurological abnormalities are seen after higher doses. The data suggest that TNF- alpha may be involved in late brain responses to irradiation and could contribute to clinical symptoms.

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