|
|
||
Radiation Biophysics
Our current radiation biophysics research mainly focuses on two areas, namely, (1) studying in vivo radiobiological effects using zebrafish embryos, and (2) rescue effect.
Resources | |||||
Review paper:
Lam, R.K.K., Fung, Y.K., Han, W., Yu, K.N., 2015. Rescue effects:
Irradiated cells helped by unirradiated bystander cells. International
Journal of Molecular Sciences 16, 2591-2609.
(download
pdf version) |
|||||
Review paper:
Choi, V.W.Y., Yu, K.N. 2015.
Embryos of the zebrafish Danio rerio in
studies of non-targeted effects of ionizing radiation. Cancer Letters
356 (2015) 91-104.
(download
pdf version) |
Review paper: Wang, H., Yu, K.N., Hou, J., Liu, Q., Han, W., 2015. Radiation-induced bystander effect: Early process and rapid assessment. Cancer Letters 356, 137-144. (download pdf version) | ||||
|
|
||||
|
|
Studying in vivo radiobiological effects using zebrafish embryos |
|||||||
Rescue effects |
|||||||
![]() |
Rescue effect is closely related to a more extensively studied non-targeted effect of ionizing radiation known as radiation-induced bystander effect (RIBE), which was first observed in in vitro experiments. RIBE in cells referred to the phenomenon that unirradiated cells responded as if they had been irradiated after they had partnered with the irradiated cells or after they had been treated with the medium previously conditioning the irradiated cells. To date, two mechanisms underlying RIBE have been widely accepted, namely, (1) gap junction intercellular communication (GJIC) in the presence of physical contacts among the cells, and (2) communication of soluble signal factors among the cells through the shared medium. Various soluble signal factors that participate in RIBE have been proposed, including tumor necrosis factor-a (TNF-a), transforming growth factor-b1 (TGF-b1), interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-8 (IL-8), nitric oxide (NO) and reactive oxygen species (ROS). The rescue effect describes the phenomenon where irradiated cells or irradiated organisms derive benefits from the feedback signals released from the bystander unirradiated cells or organisms. An example of the benefit is the mitigation of radiation induced DNA damages. Our group [1] discovered the rescue effect where the bystander cells, through sending intercellular feedback signals to the irradiated cells, mitigated the effects originally induced in the irradiated cells directly by the radiation. We [1] found that the rescue effect reduced (1) the DNA double strand breaks (DSBs) surrogated by the numbers of p53-binding protein 1 (53BP1) foci, (2) the genomic instability surrogated by the number of micronucleus (MN) formation, and (3) extent of apoptosis in the irradiated cells. In particular, we also revealed that unirradiated normal cells could rescue irradiated cancer cells.
[1]
|
||||||
|
|||||||
Publications on rescue effect (By our group)
(By other groups) 1. Widel, M., Przybyszewski, W.M., Cieslar-Pobuda, A., Saenko, Y.V., Rzeszowska-Wolny, J. 2012. Bystander normal human fibroblasts reduce damage response in radiation targeted cancer cells through intercellular ROS level modulation. Mutation Research 731, 117-124. 2. Pereira, S., Malard, V., Ravanat, J.-L., Davin, A.-H., Armengaud, J., Foray, N., Adam-Guillermin, C., 2914, Low doses of gamma-irradiation induce an early bystander effect in zebrafish cells which is sufficient to radioprotect cells. PLoS ONE 9, e92974. 3. Desai, S., Kobayashi, A., Konishi, T., Oikawa, M., Pandey, B.N., 2014. Damaging and protective bystander cross-talk between human lung cancer and normal cells after proton microbeam irradiation. Mutation Research 763-764, 39-44. 4. He, M., Dong, C., Xie, Y., Li, J., Yuan, D., Bai, Y., Shao, C., 2014. Reciprocal bystander effect between a-irradiated macrophage and hepatocyte is mediated by cAMP through a membrane signaling pathway. Mutation Research 763-764, 1-9. 5. Widel, M., Lalik, A., Krzywon, A., Poleszczuk, J., Fujarewicz, K., Rzeszowska-Wolny, J., 2015. The different radiation response and radiation-induced bystander effects in colorectal carcinoma cells differing in p53 status. Mutation Research 778, 61-70. 6. Liu, Y., Kobayashi, A., Fu, Q., Yang, G., Konishi, T., Uchihori, Y., Hei, T.K., Wang, Y., 2015. Rescue of Targeted Nonstem-Like Cells from Bystander Stem-Like Cells in Human Fibrosarcoma HT1080. Radiation Research 184, 334-340. 7. Fu, J., Yuan, D., Xiao, L., Tu, W., Dong, C., Liu, W., Shao, C., 2015. The crosstalk between a-irradiated Beas-2B cells and its bystander U937 cells through MAPK and NF-kB signaling pathways, Mutation Research (in press) http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mrfmmm.2015.11.001 |
Back to Radiation Biophysics page
![]() |
Nuclear Radiation Unit |
Page last modified on 3-Jul-2017 Privacy Policy - Copyright - Disclaimer
|
宝马会百家乐现金网| 香港百家乐六合彩| 百家乐官网已破解的书籍| 梁河县| 百家乐官网翻天qvod粤语| 广灵县| 大世界百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 | 在线百家乐电脑| 大发888海立方| 78棋牌游戏| 百家乐官网技术论坛| 百家乐游戏的玩法| 娱乐百家乐可以代理吗| 大发888 打法888| 哪里有百家乐官网赌博网站| 免费百家乐官网预测软件| 百家乐赌场群| 百家乐园| 网络百家乐官网投注| 大世界百家乐娱乐网| 皇冠透注网| 金木棉百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| 博狗百家乐真实| 免费百家乐过滤软件| 城市| 百家乐庄不连的概率| 大发888m摩卡游戏| 百家乐官网代理在线游戏可信吗网上哪家平台信誉好安全 | 百家乐线上| 爱玩棋牌下载| 棋牌室装修效果图| 百家乐官网技巧和规律| 哪里有百家乐投注网| 蓝盾网上娱乐| 百家乐官网如何制| 真人百家乐试玩账号| 蒙特卡罗代理| 赌百家乐波音备用网| 息烽县| 可信百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 百家乐官网注册|