4.7 Article

Skin Wound following Irradiation Aggravates Radiation-Induced Brain Injury in a Mouse Model

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241310701

Keywords

radiation; skin wound; radiation combined injury; inflammation; brain injury; blood-brain barrier leakage; neural cell damage

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This study evaluated the inflammatory responses induced by radiation injury and radiation combined with skin injury in the mouse brain. The results showed that radiation combined with skin injury caused more severe animal death and body weight loss compared to radiation alone, and delayed wound healing. Furthermore, both radiation alone and combined with skin injury activated astrocytes and endothelial cells, leading to blood-brain barrier leakage and neural cell damage. These findings suggest that inflammatory pathways play a role in brain injury induced by radiation combined with skin injury, with the latter exacerbating neural cell damage more than radiation alone.
Radiation injury- and radiation combined with skin injury-induced inflammatory responses in the mouse brain were evaluated in this study. Female B6D2F1/J mice were subjected to a sham, a skin wound (SW), 9.5 Gy Co-60 total-body gamma irradiation (RI), or 9.5 Gy RI combined with a skin puncture wound (RCI). Survival, body weight, and wound healing were tracked for 30 days, and mouse brain samples were collected on day 30 after SW, RI, RCI, and the sham control. Our results showed that RCI caused more severe animal death and body weight loss compared with RI, and skin wound healing was significantly delayed by RCI compared to SW. RCI and RI increased the chemokines Eotaxin, IP-10, MIG, 6Ckine/Exodus2, MCP-5, and TIMP-1 in the brain compared to SW and the sham control mice, and the Western blot results showed that IP-10 and p21 were significantly upregulated in brain cells post-RI or -RCI. RI and RCI activated both astrocytes and endothelial cells in the mouse brain, subsequently inducing blood-brain barrier (BBB) leakage, as shown by the increased ICAM1 and GFAP proteins in the brain and GFAP in the serum. The Doublecortin (DCX) protein, the gold standard for measuring neurogenesis, was significantly downregulated by RI and RCI compared with the sham group. Furthermore, RI and RCI decreased the expression of the neural stem cell marker E-cadherin, the intermediate progenitor marker MASH1, the immature neuron cell marker NeuroD1, and the mature neuron cell marker NeuN, indicating neural cell damage in all development stages after RI and RCI. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining further confirmed the significant loss of neural cells in RCI. Our data demonstrated that RI and RCI induced brain injury through inflammatory pathways, and RCI exacerbated neural cell damage more than RI.

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