| Literature DB >> 26870697 |
Smrithi S Menon1, Medha Uppal1, Subeena Randhawa1, Mehar S Cheema2, Nima Aghdam3, Rachel L Usala4, Sanchita P Ghosh5, Amrita K Cheema1, Anatoly Dritschilo2.
Abstract
Human exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) disrupts normal metabolic processes in cells and organs by inducing complex biological responses that interfere with gene and protein expression. Conventional dosimetry, monitoring of prodromal symptoms, and peripheral lymphocyte counts are of limited value as organ- and tissue-specific biomarkers for personnel exposed to radiation, particularly, weeks or months after exposure. Analysis of metabolites generated in known stress-responsive pathways by molecular profiling helps to predict the physiological status of an individual in response to environmental or genetic perturbations. Thus, a multi-metabolite profile obtained from a high-resolution mass spectrometry-based metabolomics platform offers potential for identification of robust biomarkers to predict radiation toxicity of organs and tissues resulting from exposures to therapeutic or non-therapeutic IR. Here, we review the status of radiation metabolomics and explore applications as a standalone technology, as well as its integration in systems biology, to facilitate a better understanding of the molecular basis of radiation response. Finally, we draw attention to the identification of specific pathways that can be targeted for the development of therapeutics to alleviate or mitigate harmful effects of radiation exposure.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; ionizing radiation; metabolomics
Year: 2016 PMID: 26870697 PMCID: PMC4736121 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2016.00020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Impact of exposure to ionizing radiation on biological systems.
Figure 2Oxidoreductive and macromolecular damage as a consequence of ionizing radiation exposure.
Inter-species comparison of metabolites of radiation exposure that can vary with respect to dose, type, and time.
| Metabolite | Observed change | Species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3-Hydroxy-2-methylbenzoicacid | ↑ | Rodents | ( |
| 3- | ↑ | ( | |
| SAA levels | ↑ | ( | |
| Xanthosine | ↑ | ( | |
| ↑ | ( | ||
| 2′-Deoxyxanthosine | ↑ | ( | |
| 2′-Deoxyuridine | ↑ | ( | |
| Thymidine | ↑ | ( | |
| ↑ | ( | ||
| Glyoxylate | ↑ | ( | |
| Threonate | ↑ | ( | |
| p-Cresol | ↑ | ( | |
| ↑ | ( | ||
| Tyrosol sulfate | ↑ | Non-human primate | ( |
| 3-Hydroxytyrosol sulfate | ↑ | ( | |
| ↑ | ( | ||
| Tyramine sulfate | ↑ | ( | |
| Adipic acid | ↑ | ( | |
| Creatinine | ↑ | ( | |
| Creatine | ↑ | ( | |
| Tri methyl-I-lysine | ↓ | Human | ( |
| Decanoylcarnitine | ↑ | ( | |
| Octanoylcarnitine | ↓ | ( | |
| Xanthine | ↑ | Rodents/non-human primate/human | ( |
| Taurine | ↑ | ( | |
| Acetylcarnitine | ↓ | Non-human primate/rodents | ( |
| Hypoxanthine | ↑ | ( | |
| Uric acid | ↑ | ( | |
| ↑ | Non-human primate/rodents | ( | |
| Isethionic acid | ↑ | ( | |
Figure 3Systems biology approach to radiation research.