Radiation Protection of Polydatin Against Radon Exposure Injury of Epithelial Cells and Mice.

Dose Response

State Key Laboratory of Radiation Medicine and Protection, School of Radiation Medicine and Protection, Soochow University, Suzhou, China.

Published: April 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • * A study showed that polydatin (PD) can mitigate damage from radon exposure by reducing oxidative stress and preventing changes associated with lung tissue injury, such as decreased migration and altered cell markers.
  • * PD works by targeting the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway, and is more effective when given before and after radon exposure, leading to better cell adhesion and less fibrotic changes in lung tissue.

Article Abstract

Radon exposure is significantly associated with lung cancer. Radon concentration is currently reduced mainly by physical methods, but there is a lack of protective drugs or biochemical reagents for radon damage. This study aimed to explore the protective effect of polydatin (PD) on the radon-exposed injury. The results showed that PD can significantly reduce ROS level, raise SOD activity, weaken the migration ability, increase E-cad, and decrease mesenchymal cell surface markers (FN1, Vimentin, N-cad, α-SMA, and Snail) in radon-exposed epithelial cells. In vivo, PD increased the mice weight, promoted SOD activity, and decreased MDA content, the number of bullae, pulmonary septum thickness, lung collagenous fibers, and mesenchymal cell surface markers. Furthermore, PD inhibited p-PI3K, p-AKT, and p-mTOR expression. Compared with directly adding PD on radon-exposed cells, adding PD before and after radon exposure could more obviously improve the adhesion of radon-exposed cells, significantly alleviate the migration ability, and more significantly reduce mesenchyme markers and p-AKT and p-mTOR. These results indicate that PD can reduce oxidative stress, weaken epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and lung fibrosis in radon-exposed cells/mice, and have good radiation protection against radon injury. The mechanism is related to the inhibition of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10134130PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15593258231172271DOI Listing

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