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EFFECTS OF IN VIVO PROTON IRRADIATION ON MOUSE T AND B LYMPHOCYTES

TitoloEFFECTS OF IN VIVO PROTON IRRADIATION ON MOUSE T AND B LYMPHOCYTES
Tipo di pubblicazioneAtti di Congresso
Anno di Pubblicazione2017
AutoriNovelli, Flavia, Vadrucci Monia, Rosado Maria Manuela, Picardi Luigi, Benvenuto Eugenio, and Pioli Claudio
Conference NameRAD Association Journal
Volume2
Data di pubblicazioneJan-01-2017
Abstract

One of the major problems derived from the exposure to ionizing radiation is the impairment of the
immune system. The consequent immune-depression increases the risk of infections and may lead to immunemediated
disorders. The intensity and duration of the immune-compromised phase and its recovery depend on the
dose, dose-rate and quality of radiation. In recent years, there has been a great interest in the effects induced by
protons, both for a better assessment of the health risks in astronauts exposed to solar wind and cosmic radiations
and for a better understanding of their effects in radiotherapy for oncologic patients. In the present study, we
investigated the effects of the in vivo exposure to 2 Gy of integral dose absorbed by medium energy proton beams on
mouse lymphoid spleen cells. The TOP-IMPLART accelerator was used as proton source. Irradiations were performed
in air with pulsed (3.4 s, 10Hz) 27 MeV proton beams. During the exposure, mice were anesthetized in order to keep
them in the right position. Sham-exposed anesthetized age/gender/strain-matched mice were used as controls.
Twenty-four hours and 1 week after irradiation, each mouse was individually analyzed for several parameters
(5 mice/group). Results showed that the number of nucleated cells in the spleen was not significantly affected. Flow
cytometry analyses revealed that the percentages of helper T (CD4), cytotoxic T (CD8) and B (CD19) cells within the
spleen lymphocytes were not altered 24 hours after the exposure. At variance, 1 week after the exposure the frequency
of CD4 (14% vs. 9%) and CD19 (37% vs. 26%) cells reduced. Spleen cells were stimulated with an anti-CD3 antibody
and LPS to induce T cell and B cell activation, respectively. Both T and B cells were functionally impaired by the
exposure. Twenty-four hours after irradiation, T cell proliferation was indeed reduced by 50% in exposed mice
compared with controls. B cells also displayed a reduced cell proliferation in response to the mitogenic stimulus
(-33%). Interestingly, 1 week after irradiation proliferative responses of T and B cells were still compromised. This
first study allowed the conclusion that, in vivo local exposure to protons induced small changes in total spleen cell
number, the frequency of CD4 and B cells being reduced 1 week after the exposure. More interesting, functional
responses, such as T and B cell proliferation were partially compromised. These effects, in spite of the limited area of
exposure, were not recovered after 1 week.

URLhttp://www.rad-journal.org/paper.php?id=91http://www.rad-journal.org/paper.php?id=91
DOI10.21175/RadJ.2017.03.047
Titolo breveRadJ
Citation Key6254