Human enteroids as a tool to study conventional and ultra-high dose rate radiation.

IF 1.5 4区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY Integrative Biology Pub Date : 2023-04-11 DOI:10.1093/intbio/zyad013
Katarina C Klett, Briana C Martin-Villa, Victoria S Villarreal, Stavros Melemenidis, Vignesh Viswanathan, Rakesh Manjappa, M Ramish Ashraf, Luis Soto, Brianna Lau, Suparna Dutt, Erinn B Rankin, Billy W Loo, Sarah C Heilshorn
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Abstract

Radiation therapy, one of the most effective therapies to treat cancer, is highly toxic to healthy tissue. The delivery of radiation at ultra-high dose rates, FLASH radiation therapy (FLASH), has been shown to maintain therapeutic anti-tumor efficacy while sparing normal tissues compared to conventional dose rate irradiation (CONV). Though promising, these studies have been limited mainly to murine models. Here, we leveraged enteroids, three-dimensional cell clusters that mimic the intestine, to study human-specific tissue response to radiation. We observed enteroids have a greater colony growth potential following FLASH compared with CONV. In addition, the enteroids that reformed following FLASH more frequently exhibited proper intestinal polarity. While we did not observe differences in enteroid damage across groups, we did see distinct transcriptomic changes. Specifically, the FLASH enteroids upregulated the expression of genes associated with the WNT-family, cell-cell adhesion, and hypoxia response. These studies validate human enteroids as a model to investigate FLASH and provide further evidence supporting clinical study of this therapy. Insight Box Promising work has been done to demonstrate the potential of ultra-high dose rate radiation (FLASH) to ablate cancerous tissue, while preserving healthy tissue. While encouraging, these findings have been primarily observed using pre-clinical murine and traditional two-dimensional cell culture. This study validates the use of human enteroids as a tool to investigate human-specific tissue response to FLASH. Specifically, the work described demonstrates the ability of enteroids to recapitulate previous in vivo findings, while also providing a lens through which to probe cellular and molecular-level responses to FLASH. The human enteroids described herein offer a powerful model that can be used to probe the underlying mechanisms of FLASH in future studies.

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将人类肠道作为研究常规和超高剂量率辐射的工具。
放射疗法是治疗癌症最有效的疗法之一,对健康组织具有高度毒性。与常规剂量率辐射(CONV)相比,超高剂量率辐射的递送,即FLASH辐射治疗(FLASH),已被证明可以保持治疗性抗肿瘤疗效,同时保留正常组织。尽管这些研究很有前景,但主要局限于小鼠模型。在这里,我们利用类肠细胞,即模拟肠道的三维细胞簇,来研究人类特定组织对辐射的反应。我们观察到,与CONV相比,FLASH后的类肠道具有更大的菌落生长潜力。此外,FLASH之后重组的类肠道更频繁地表现出适当的肠道极性。虽然我们没有观察到各组肠样损伤的差异,但我们确实看到了不同的转录组变化。具体而言,FLASH类肠上调了与WNT家族、细胞-细胞粘附和缺氧反应相关的基因的表达。这些研究验证了人类肠道作为研究FLASH的模型,并为该疗法的临床研究提供了进一步的证据。Insight Box已经开展了有希望的工作,以证明超高剂量率辐射(FLASH)在消融癌组织的同时保护健康组织的潜力。虽然令人鼓舞,但这些发现主要是通过临床前小鼠和传统的二维细胞培养观察到的。这项研究验证了使用人类肠道作为研究人类特异性组织对FLASH反应的工具。具体而言,所描述的工作证明了类肠病毒能够重述以前的体内发现,同时也提供了一个透镜,通过它来探测细胞和分子水平对FLASH的反应。本文所述的人类肠道提供了一个强大的模型,可用于在未来的研究中探索FLASH的潜在机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Integrative Biology
Integrative Biology 生物-细胞生物学
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Integrative Biology publishes original biological research based on innovative experimental and theoretical methodologies that answer biological questions. The journal is multi- and inter-disciplinary, calling upon expertise and technologies from the physical sciences, engineering, computation, imaging, and mathematics to address critical questions in biological systems. Research using experimental or computational quantitative technologies to characterise biological systems at the molecular, cellular, tissue and population levels is welcomed. Of particular interest are submissions contributing to quantitative understanding of how component properties at one level in the dimensional scale (nano to micro) determine system behaviour at a higher level of complexity. Studies of synthetic systems, whether used to elucidate fundamental principles of biological function or as the basis for novel applications are also of interest.
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