4.5 Review

Ionizing radiation-induced risks to the central nervous system and countermeasures in cellular and rodent models

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue -, Pages S132-S150

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09553002.2020.1820598

Keywords

Ionizing radiation; countermeasure; radioprotection; central nervous system

Funding

  1. NASA HRP [NNJ16HP24I]
  2. Translational Research Institute through NASA [NNX16AO69A]

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The study focuses on the harmful effects of ionizing radiation on the CNS, discussing various protective and mitigative strategies to reduce DNA damage, oxidative stress, cell death, and systemic inflammation. It emphasizes the importance of combined strategies to protect the CNS from the detrimental actions of radiation. The authors suggest further research on practical applicability and effectiveness, as well as maximizing the benefits and reducing side effects of existing therapeutic approaches for a wider range of irradiation paradigms.
Purpose Harmful effects of ionizing radiation on the Central Nervous System (CNS) are a concerning outcome in the field of cancer radiotherapy and form a major risk for deep space exploration. Both acute and chronic CNS irradiation induce a complex network of molecular and cellular alterations including DNA damage, oxidative stress, cell death and systemic inflammation, leading to changes in neuronal structure and synaptic plasticity with behavioral and cognitive consequences in animal models. Due to this complexity, countermeasure or therapeutic approaches to reduce the harmful effects of ionizing radiation include a wide range of protective and mitigative strategies, which merit a thorough comparative analysis. Materials and methods We reviewed current approaches for developing countermeasures to both targeted and non-targeted effects of ionizing radiation on the CNS from the molecular and cellular to the behavioral level. Results We focus on countermeasures that aim to mitigate the four main detrimental actions of radiation on CNS: DNA damage, free radical formation and oxidative stress, cell death, and harmful systemic responses including tissue death and neuroinflammation. We propose a comprehensive review of CNS radiation countermeasures reported for the full range of irradiation types (photons and particles, low and high linear energy transfer) and doses (from a fraction of gray to several tens of gray, fractionated and unfractionated), with a particular interest for exposure conditions relevant to deep-space environment and radiotherapy. Our review reveals the importance of combined strategies that increase DNA protection and repair, reduce free radical formation and increase their elimination, limit inflammation and improve cell viability, limit tissue damage and increase repair and plasticity. Conclusions The majority of therapeutic approaches to protect the CNS from ionizing radiation have been limited to acute high dose and high dose rate gamma irradiation, and few are translatable from animal models to potential human application due to harmful side effects and lack of blood-brain barrier permeability that precludes peripheral administration. Therefore, a promising research direction would be to focus on practical applicability and effectiveness in a wider range of irradiation paradigms, from fractionated therapeutic to deep space radiation. In addition to discovering novel therapeutics, it would be worth maximizing the benefits and reducing side effects of those that already exist. Finally, we suggest that novel cellular and tissue models for developing and testing countermeasures in the context of other impairments might also be applied to the field of CNS responses to ionizing radiation.

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