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Bystander-induced differentiation: A major response to targeted irradiation of a urothelial explant model

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DOI: 10.1016/j.mrfmmm.2005.08.012

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bystander effect; microbeam; differentiation; urothelial explant model

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A ureter primary explant technique, using porcine tissue sections was developed to study bystander effects under in vivo like conditions where dividing and differentiated cells are present. Targeted irradiations of ureter tissue fragments were performed with the Gray Cancer Institute charged particle microbeam at a single location (2 mu m precision) with 10 He-3(2+) particles (5 MeV; LET 70 keV/mu m). After irradiation the ureter tissue section was incubated for 7 days allowing explant outgrowth to be formed. Differentiation was estimated using antibodies to Uroplakin III, a specific marker of terminal urothelial differentiation. Even although only a single region of the tissue section was targeted, thousands of additional cells were found to undergo bystander-induced differentiation in the explant outgrowth. This resulted in an overall increase in the fraction of differentiated cells from 63.5 +/- 5.4% to 76.6 +/- 5.6%. These changes are much greater than that observed for the induction of damage in this model. One interpretation of these results is that in the tissue environment, differentiation is a much more significant response to targeted irradiation and potentially a protective mechanism. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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