Exposure to high-dose ionizing radiation can lead to life-threatening injuries and mortality. Bone marrow is the most sensitive organ to radiation damage, resulting in the hematopoietic acute radiation syndrome (H-ARS) with the potential sequelae of infection, hemorrhage, anemia, and death if untreated. The development of medical countermeasures (MCMs) to protect or mitigate radiation injury is a medical necessity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurvivors of acute radiation exposure suffer from the delayed effects of acute radiation exposure (DEARE), a chronic condition affecting multiple organs, including lung, kidney, heart, gastrointestinal tract, eyes, and brain, and often causing cancer. While effective medical countermeasures (MCM) for the hematopoietic-acute radiation syndrome (H-ARS) have been identified and approved by the FDA, development of MCM for DEARE has not yet been successful. We previously documented residual bone marrow damage (RBMD) and progressive renal and cardiovascular DEARE in murine survivors of H-ARS, and significant survival efficacy of 16,16-dimethyl prostaglandin E2 (dmPGE2) given as a radioprotectant or radiomitigator for H-ARS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCXCR4 antagonists sensitize FLT3/ITD AML cells to FLT3 inhibitors; however, CXCR4 signaling can induce apoptosis in AML cells, raising the question of whether CXCR4 signaling exerts divergent effects on FLT3/ITD cells. The present study investigated the paradoxical function of CXCR4 in resistance to FLT3 inhibitors. The FLT3 inhibitor quizartinib significantly decreased the number of FLT3/ITD Ba/F3 cells, whereas 1 ng/ml CXCL12 showed a significant protective effect against quizartinib.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
October 2022
The hematopoietic system is one of the most sensitive tissues to ionizing radiation, and radiation doses from 2 to 10 gray can result in death from bleeding and infection if left untreated. Reviewing the range of radiation doses reported in the literature that result in similar lethality highlights the need for a more consistent model that would allow a better comparison of the hematopoietic acute radiation syndrome (H-ARS) studies carried out in different laboratories. Developing a murine model of H-ARS to provide a platform suited for efficacy testing of medical countermeasures (MCM) against radiation should include a review of the Food and Drug Administration requirements outlined in the Animal Rule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiation exposure is particularly damaging to cells of the hematopoietic system, inducing pancytopenia and bone marrow failure. The study of these processes, as well as the development of treatments to prevent hematopoietic damage or enhance recovery after radiation exposure, often require analysis of bone marrow cells early after irradiation. While flow cytometry methods are well characterized for identification and analysis of bone marrow populations in the nonirradiated setting, multiple complications arise when dealing with irradiated tissues.
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