| Literature DB >> 24160185 |
Peter Grabham1, Preety Sharma.
Abstract
The average human body contains tens of thousands of miles of vessels that permeate every tissue down to the microscopic level. This makes the human vasculature a prime target for an agent like radiation that originates from a source and passes through the body. Exposure to radiation released during nuclear accidents and explosions, or during cancer radiotherapy, is well known to cause vascular pathologies because of the ionizing effects of electromagnetic radiations (photons) such as gamma rays. There is however, another type of less well-known radiation - charged ion particles, and these atoms stripped of electrons, have different physical properties to the photons of electromagnetic radiation. They are either found in space or created on earth by particle collider facilities, and are of significant recent interest due to their enhanced effectiveness and increasing use in cancer radiotherapy, as well as a health risk to the growing number of people spending time in the space environment. Although there is to date, relatively few studies on the effects of charged particles on the vascular system, a very different picture of the biological effects of these particles compared to photons is beginning to emerge. These under researched biological effects of ion particles have a large impact on the health consequences of exposure. In this short review, we will discuss the effects of charged particles on an important biological process of the vascular system, angiogenesis, which creates and maintains the vasculature and is highly important in tumor vasculogenesis.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24160185 PMCID: PMC3895662 DOI: 10.1186/2045-824X-5-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Cell ISSN: 2045-824X
Figure 1Exposure to protons and Fe ions results in distinct morphologies of mature 3-Dimensional vessel models. 24 hours after HUVEC were seeded into matrices they were exposed to 1Gy of each type of particle radiation and then cultured for a further 5 days until vessel structures had formed. Fixed cultures were stained for all protein material (DTAF – green) and nuclei (Propidium Iodide – red and imaging as yellow). Images are 10 slices 2 μm apart projected onto a single plane. A, Control HUVEC culture shows vessels with lumens that have formed a connecting network. B, Cultures exposed to 1 Gy Fe ions formed a network but vessels are often thinner without lumens (arrow). C, Cultures exposed to 1 Gy protons fail to form a network and vessels terminate in a dead end (arrow). Bar = 100 μm. From Grabham et al., 2013 [12].