4.7 Article

Differential Effects of Low and High Radiation Dose Rates on Mouse Spermatogenesis

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms222312834

Keywords

ionizing radiation; low dose rate; spermatogenesis; testis

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The study revealed that the radiation dose rate has different effects on the testes of mice. Low dose rate radiation caused more severe tissue toxicity and adverse effects on sperm production compared to high dose rate radiation. This suggests that the dose rate of radiation may have differential impacts on different organs.
The adverse effects of radiation are proportional to the total dose and dose rate. We aimed to investigate the effects of radiation dose rate on different organs in mice. The mice were subjected to low dose rate (LDR, ~3.4 mGy/h) and high dose rate (HDR, ~51 Gy/h) radiation. LDR radiation caused severe tissue toxicity, as observed in the histological analysis of testis. It adversely influenced sperm production, including sperm count and motility, and induced greater sperm abnormalities. The expression of markers of early stage spermatogonial stem cells, such as Plzf, c-Kit, and Oct4, decreased significantly after LDR irradiation, compared to that following exposure of HDR radiation, in qPCR analysis. The compositional ratios of all stages of spermatogonia and meiotic cells, except round spermatid, were considerably reduced by LDR in FACS analysis. Therefore, LDR radiation caused more adverse testicular damage than that by HDR radiation, contrary to the response observed in other organs. Therefore, the dose rate of radiation may have differential effects, depending on the organ; it is necessary to evaluate the effect of radiation in terms of radiation dose, dose rate, organ type, and other conditions.

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