唾液中的基因表达可替代血液用于生物模拟和预测辐射对健康的影响。

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 BIOLOGY Radiation research Pub Date : 2024-05-01 DOI:10.1667/RADE-23-00176.1
P Ostheim, A Tichý, C Badie, M Davidkova, G Kultova, M Markova Stastna, I Sirak, S Stewart, D Schwanke, M Kasper, S A Ghandhi, S A Amundson, W Bäumler, C Stroszczynski, M Port, M Abend
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于绝大多数基因表达(GE)生物模拟研究都是以血液为首选组织来源,因此在考虑生物模拟方法时,寻找简单、侵入性较低的采样方法非常重要。由于全唾液中含有血液和白细胞的超滤液,因此预计血液中的研究结果也能在唾液中找到。这项人体活体研究旨在检查唾液中辐射诱导的 GE 变化,以用于生物模拟目的,并预测辐射诱导的疾病,而这种疾病的特征尚不十分明确。此外,我们还研究了血液中的转录生物标志物是否也能在唾液中找到。我们同时采集了接受分次部分全身照射(1.8 Gy/分次,总剂量为 50-70 Gy)的头颈部癌症患者(8 人)的唾液和血液样本。样本在首次照射前 12-24 小时采集,最好在放疗开始后 24 和 48 小时以及 5 周内采集。由于一名患者分离出的 RNA 样本质量和数量较低,不得不将其排除在进一步分析之外,因此有 7 名患者的 24 份唾液和 24 份血液样本符合分析条件。利用 qRT-PCR、18S rRNA 和 16S rRNA(该比值是相对人类 RNA/细菌负荷的代用指标),检测到四个看门基因和九个以前在基于血液的研究中被确定为对辐射有反应的 mRNA。在第 2 次放疗后,发现 5 个基因与吸收剂量有显著的 GE 关联,如 CDKN1A(增加 2.0 倍,P = 0.017)和 FDXR(增加 1.9 倍,P = 0.002)。然而,在第25次放疗后,预测ARS(急性放射综合征)严重程度的所有四个基因(FDXR、DDB2、POU2AF1、WNT3)以及其他基因(包括CCNG1 [中位倍变化(FC)= 0.3,P = 0.013]和GADD45A(中位倍变化(FC)= 0.3,P = 0.031))都出现了明显的下调(FC = 0.3,P = 0.01-0.03)。在这些临床结果出现之前,CCNG1、POU2AF1、HPRT1 和 WNT3(P = 0.006-0.04)与急性或晚期放射性毒性有明显关联。在一组预测血液中急性健康影响的四个基因中,唾液样本中的反应与血液中预期的上调(FDXR、DDB2)或下调(POU2AF1、WNT3)相似的情况高达 71%。比较唾液和血液样本中的 GE 反应(PHPT1、CCNG1、CDKN1A、GADD45A、SESN1),发现唾液和血液中 CDKN1A 的反应之间存在显著的线性关系(R2 = 0.60,P = 0.0004)。然而,唾液和血液中其他基因的 GE 模式有所不同。总之,目前的人体活体研究(I)揭示了唾液样本中五个转录生物标志物的辐射诱导 GE 关联;(II)提示了预测急性和晚期放射性毒性以及 ARS 严重程度等不同临床结果的基因;(III)支持了血液 GE 反应可反映在唾液样本中的观点,表明唾液是某些基因的 "人体镜子",但不是所有基因,因此需要对唾液中血液中的每个相关基因进行研究。
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Applicability of Gene Expression in Saliva as an Alternative to Blood for Biodosimetry and Prediction of Radiation-induced Health Effects.

As the great majority of gene expression (GE) biodosimetry studies have been performed using blood as the preferred source of tissue, searching for simple and less-invasive sampling methods is important when considering biodosimetry approaches. Knowing that whole saliva contains an ultrafiltrate of blood and white blood cells, it is expected that the findings in blood can also be found in saliva. This human in vivo study aims to examine radiation-induced GE changes in saliva for biodosimetry purposes and to predict radiation-induced disease, which is yet poorly characterized. Furthermore, we examined whether transcriptional biomarkers in blood can also be found equivalently in saliva. Saliva and blood samples were collected in parallel from radiotherapy (RT) treated patients who suffered from head and neck cancer (n = 8) undergoing fractioned partial-body irradiations (1.8 Gy/fraction and 50-70 Gy total dose). Samples were taken 12-24 h before first irradiation and ideally 24 and 48 h, as well as 5 weeks after radiotherapy onset. Due to the low quality and quantity of isolated RNA samples from one patient, they had to be excluded from further analysis, leaving a total of 24 saliva and 24 blood samples from 7 patients eligible for analysis. Using qRT-PCR, 18S rRNA and 16S rRNA (the ratio being a surrogate for the relative human RNA/bacterial burden), four housekeeping genes and nine mRNAs previously identified as radiation responsive in blood-based studies were detected. Significant GE associations with absorbed dose were found for five genes and after the 2nd radiotherapy fraction, shown by, e.g., the increase of CDKN1A (2.0 fold, P = 0.017) and FDXR (1.9 fold increased, P = 0.002). After the 25th radiotherapy fraction, however, all four genes (FDXR, DDB2, POU2AF1, WNT3) predicting ARS (acute radiation syndrome) severity, as well as further genes (including CCNG1 [median-fold change (FC) = 0.3, P = 0.013], and GADD45A (median-FC = 0.3, P = 0.031)) appeared significantly downregulated (FC = 0.3, P = 0.01-0.03). A significant association of CCNG1, POU2AF1, HPRT1, and WNT3 (P = 0.006-0.04) with acute or late radiotoxicity could be shown before the onset of these clinical outcomes. In an established set of four genes predicting acute health effects in blood, the response in saliva samples was similar to the expected up- (FDXR, DDB2) or downregulation (POU2AF1, WNT3) in blood for up to 71% of the measurements. Comparing GE responses (PHPT1, CCNG1, CDKN1A, GADD45A, SESN1) in saliva and blood samples, there was a significant linear association between saliva and blood response of CDKN1A (R2 = 0.60, P = 0.0004). However, the GE pattern of other genes differed between saliva and blood. In summary, the current human in vivo study, (I) reveals significant radiation-induced GE associations of five transcriptional biomarkers in salivary samples, (II) suggests genes predicting diverse clinical outcomes such as acute and late radiotoxicity as well as ARS severity, and (III) supports the view that blood-based GE response can be reflected in saliva samples, indicating that saliva is a "mirror of the body" for certain but not all genes and, thus, studies for each gene of interest in blood are required for saliva.

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来源期刊
Radiation research
Radiation research 医学-核医学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
8.80%
发文量
179
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Radiation Research publishes original articles dealing with radiation effects and related subjects in the areas of physics, chemistry, biology and medicine, including epidemiology and translational research. The term radiation is used in its broadest sense and includes specifically ionizing radiation and ultraviolet, visible and infrared light as well as microwaves, ultrasound and heat. Effects may be physical, chemical or biological. Related subjects include (but are not limited to) dosimetry methods and instrumentation, isotope techniques and studies with chemical agents contributing to the understanding of radiation effects.
期刊最新文献
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