| Literature DB >> 32013650 |
Hong-Soo Lee1, Doo-Wan Cho1, Ji-Seok Han2, Su-Cheol Han1, Sang Keun Woo3, Soo-Youn Jun4, Woo-Jong Lee5, Susie Yoon6, Son-Il Pak7, Sang-Jin Lee1, Eunsol Seong8, Eun-Jung Park8.
Abstract
In the study here, the potential applicability of KMRC011 - an agonist of toll-like receptor-5 - as a countermeasure for radiation toxicities was evaluated. Following a single 5.5 Gy total body irradiation (TBI, surface absorbed dose = 7 Gy) of Co60 γ-rays, mortality rates and degrees of pathological lesions that developed over 80 days were compared in monkeys that received TBI only and a group that was injected once with KMRC011 (10 μg/kg) after TBI. Compared to the TBI-only hosts (80%), the death rate was significantly improved by the use of KMRC011 (40%), all deaths in both groups occurred in the period from Days 19-24 post-TBI. Further analysis of monkeys that survived until the end of the experiment showed that AST and ALT levels were elevated only in the TBI group, and that radiation-induced tissue damage was alleviated by the KMRC011 injection. Additionally, expression of cell death-related proteins was lower in tissues from the KMRC011-treated hosts than in those in the TBI-only group. Other measured parameters, including body weight, food uptake, and hematological values did not significantly differ between the two groups over the entire period. The results of this study, thus demonstrate that KMRC011 could potentially be used as a medical countermeasure for the treatment of acute radiation exposure.Entities:
Keywords: Radiation therapy; caveolin-1; entolimod; medical radiation countermeasure; toll-like receptor 5
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32013650 DOI: 10.1080/1547691X.2019.1699617
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunotoxicol ISSN: 1547-691X Impact factor: 3.000