4.4 Article

Effect of the p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Signaling Cascade on Radiation Biodosimetry

Journal

RADIATION RESEARCH
Volume 198, Issue 1, Pages 18-27

Publisher

RADIATION RESEARCH SOC
DOI: 10.1667/RADE-21-00240.1

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Funding

  1. Center for High-Throughput Minimally-Invasive Radiation Biodosimetry, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [U19AI067773]

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Radiation biodosimetry based on transcriptomic analysis of peripheral blood is a valuable tool for detecting radiation exposure, but confounding factors may affect its predictive power. The p38 signaling pathway plays an important role in the response to radiation, and its attenuation may protect blood cells from radiation-induced damage.
Radiation biodosimetry based on transcriptomic analysis of peripheral blood is a valuable tool to detect radiation exposure after a radiological/nuclear event and obtain useful biological information that could predict tissue and organismal injury. However, confounding factors, including chronic inflammation or immune suppression, can potentially obscure the predictive power of the method. Members of the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) family respond to pro-inflammatory signals and environmental stresses, whereas genetic ablation of the p38 signaling pathway in mice leads to reduced susceptibility to collagen-induced arthritis and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis that model human rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, respectively. p38 is normally regulated by the MAP3K-MAP2K pathway in mammalian cells. However, in T cells there is an alternative pathway for p38 activation that plays an important role in antigen-receptor-activated T cells and participates in immune and inflammatory responses. To examine the role of p38 in response to radiation, we used two mouse models expressing either a p38 alpha dominant negative (DN) mutation that globally suppresses p38 signaling or a p38 alpha beta double-knock-in (DKI) mutant, which inhibits specifically T-cell receptor activation. We exposed p38 wild-type (p38WT) and mutant male mice to 7 Gy X rays and 24 h later whole blood was isolated subjected to whole-genome microarray and gene ontology analysis. Irradiation of p38WT mice led to a significant overrepresentation of pathways associated with morbidity and mortality, as well as organismal cell death. In contrast, these pathways were significantly under-represented in p38DN and p38DKI mutant mice, suggesting that p38 attenuation may protect blood cells from deleterious effects of radiation. Furthermore, radiation exposure in p38 mutant mice resulted in an enrichment of phagocytosis-related pathways, suggesting a role for p38 signaling in restricting phagocytosis of apoptotic cells after irradiation. Finally, despite the significant changes in gene expression, it was still feasible to identify a panel of genes that could accurately distinguish between irradiated and control mice, irrespective of p38 status. (C) 2022 by Radiation Research Society

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