Literature DB >> 3708268

Late radiation response of kidney assayed by tubule-cell survival.

H R Withers, K A Mason, H D Thames.   

Abstract

An assay for the survival of renal tubule cells was developed using mice. It is analogous to other in-situ clonogenic cell survival assays. One kidney was irradiated using a 137Cs irradiator and removed 60-68 weeks later for histological examination. In unirradiated animals there were about 370 tubules in contact with the capsule in a coronal cross section at the middle of the kidney. After irradiation, extensive tubular damage was the dominant lesion. The number of epithelialized tubules in contact with the capsule showed a dose-dependent logarithmic decline. The dose-survival relationship for the clonogenic cells responsible for the regeneration of tubule epithelium was described by a D0 value of 1.5 Gy over the dose range 11-16 Gy. This radiosensitivity resembles that of stem cells in acutely responding tissues. The lack of histological evidence of damage to the arterial vasculature at the time the tubules are initially denuded of epithelium, and the similarity of renal tubule cell radiosensitivity to that of other mammalian cells, support the hypothesis that "late" radiation injury results primarily from depletion of parenchymal cells, not indirectly from injury to blood vessels, as has been the prevailing belief.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3708268     DOI: 10.1259/0007-1285-59-702-587

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Radiol        ISSN: 0007-1285            Impact factor:   3.039


  6 in total

1.  Animal models for medical countermeasures to radiation exposure.

Authors:  Jacqueline P Williams; Stephen L Brown; George E Georges; Martin Hauer-Jensen; Richard P Hill; Amy K Huser; David G Kirsch; Thomas J Macvittie; Kathy A Mason; Meetha M Medhora; John E Moulder; Paul Okunieff; Mary F Otterson; Michael E Robbins; James B Smathers; William H McBride
Journal:  Radiat Res       Date:  2010-04       Impact factor: 2.841

2.  Kidney-induced cardiac allograft tolerance in miniature swine is dependent on MHC-matching of donor cardiac and renal parenchyma.

Authors:  M L Madariaga; S G Michel; G M La Muraglia; M Sekijima; V Villani; D A Leonard; H J Powell; J M Kurtz; E A Farkash; R B Colvin; J S Allan; C L Cetrulo; C A Huang; D H Sachs; K Yamada; J C Madsen
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2015-03-30       Impact factor: 8.086

3.  Epoxyeicosatrienoic acid analogue mitigates kidney injury in a rat model of radiation nephropathy.

Authors:  Md Abdul Hye Khan; Brian Fish; Geneva Wahl; Amit Sharma; John R Falck; Mahesh P Paudyal; John E Moulder; John D Imig; Eric P Cohen
Journal:  Clin Sci (Lond)       Date:  2016-01-15       Impact factor: 6.124

Review 4.  Addressing the Symptoms or Fixing the Problem? Developing Countermeasures against Normal Tissue Radiation Injury.

Authors:  Jacqueline P Williams; Laura Calvi; Joe V Chakkalakal; Jacob N Finkelstein; M Kerry O'Banion; Edward Puzas
Journal:  Radiat Res       Date:  2016-06-22       Impact factor: 2.841

5.  Noninvasive assessment of radiation-induced renal injury in mice.

Authors:  Anis Ahmad; Junwei Shi; Saba Ansari; Jumana Afaghani; Judith Molina; Alan Pollack; Sandra Merscher; Youssef H Zeidan; Alessia Fornoni; Brian Marples
Journal:  Int J Radiat Biol       Date:  2021-03-15       Impact factor: 2.694

6.  Inhibition of mTORC1 signaling protects kidney from irradiation-induced toxicity via accelerating recovery of renal stem-like cells.

Authors:  Lijian Shao; Wuping Yang; Rui Xu; Shuqin Zhu; Yanqiu Huang; Huan Li; Xincheng Wu; Mengzhen Yue; Xiaoliang Xiong; Xiaowen Chen; Bohai Kuang; Guangqin Fan; Qingxian Zhu; Huihong Zeng
Journal:  Stem Cell Res Ther       Date:  2018-08-14       Impact factor: 6.832

  6 in total

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