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Publication : Autophagy confers DNA damage repair pathways to protect the hematopoietic system from nuclear radiation injury.

First Author  Lin W Year  2015
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  5
Pages  12362 PubMed ID  26197097
Mgi Jnum  J:268536 Mgi Id  MGI:6101692
Doi  10.1038/srep12362 Citation  Lin W, et al. (2015) Autophagy confers DNA damage repair pathways to protect the hematopoietic system from nuclear radiation injury. Sci Rep 5:12362
abstractText  Autophagy is essentially a metabolic process, but its in vivo role in nuclear radioprotection remains unexplored. We observed that ex vivo autophagy activation reversed the proliferation inhibition, apoptosis, and DNA damage in irradiated hematopoietic cells. In vivo autophagy activation improved bone marrow cellularity following nuclear radiation exposure. In contrast, defective autophagy in the hematopoietic conditional mouse model worsened the hematopoietic injury, reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation and DNA damage caused by nuclear radiation exposure. Strikingly, in vivo defective autophagy caused an absence or reduction in regulatory proteins critical to both homologous recombination (HR) and non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) DNA damage repair pathways, as well as a failure to induce these proteins in response to nuclear radiation. In contrast, in vivo autophagy activation increased most of these proteins in hematopoietic cells. DNA damage assays confirmed the role of in vivo autophagy in the resolution of double-stranded DNA breaks in total bone marrow cells as well as bone marrow stem and progenitor cells upon whole body irradiation. Hence, autophagy protects the hematopoietic system against nuclear radiation injury by conferring and intensifying the HR and NHEJ DNA damage repair pathways and by removing ROS and inhibiting apoptosis.
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