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Screening of radioprotective agents using zebrafish and Therapeutic effects and protective mechanism of radioprotective candidates on radiation-induced oral mucositis

Other Title
지브라피쉬를 이용한 방사선보호물질 탐색과 이를 통해 도출된 후보 물질의 방사선 조사성 구내염에 대한 치료효과 분석과 보호 기전 연구
Authors
박, 근형
Advisor
김, 철호
Department
대학원 의학과
Degree
Doctor (2015)
Abstract
Screening of radioprotective agents using zebrafish and Therapeutic effects and protective mechanism of radioprotective candidates on radiation-induced oral mucositis



Radiation-induced oral mucositis is a dose-limiting toxic side effect for patients with head and neck cancer. About 50–90% of cancer patients who undergo radiation therapy experience oral mucositis. Current oral mucositis therapies are mostly palliative. Some of these include antibiotics, analgesics, general oral hygiene, and the use of various mucosal barrier agents and radioprotective agents, such as amifostine. Despite the clinical significance of oral mucositis, there is no definite approved treatment

In this study, we have used the in vivo zebrafish model to screen for radioprotective agents. The zebrafish, a small vertebrate species, has been widely used as an in vivo model system to study human disease because of its marked similarity to mammals in many of the key genes involved in developmental processes, cell cycle progression and proliferation, and differentiation. Unlike other vertebrate species, however, zebrafish are rapidly bred and easily maintained in the laboratory. Zebrafish embryos provide a versatile model system for assaying radioprotectors/radiomitigators in a vertebrate organism, both on a systemic and organ-specific basis.

Through in vivo zebrafish screening, we found several candidates to decrease radiation induced damage. Korean red ginseng (KRG, steamed root of Panax ginseng CA Meyer) is one of the candidates. KRG has been an established traditional herbal medicine for millenia. The spectrum of medicinal effects of KRG include antibacterial, antiviral, antioxidative, antitumor, antimutagenic, and immune-modulatory activities. Many of these medicinal effects are attributed to the triterpene glycosides known as ginsenosides (saponins). Our aim was to investigate the effectiveness of KRG on radiation-induced damage in the human keratinocyte cell line HaCaT and in an in vivo zebrafish model. Radiation inhibited HaCaT cell proliferation and migration in a cell viability assay and wound healing assay, respectively. KRG protected against these effects. KRG attenuated the radiation-induced embryotoxicity in the zebrafish model. Irradiation of HaCaT cells caused apoptosis and changed in mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP). KRG inhibited the radiation-induced apoptosis and intracellular generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and stabilized the radiation-induced loss of MMP. Western blots revealed KRG-mediated reduced expression of ataxia telangiectasia mutated protein (ATM), p53, c-JunN-terminal kinase (JNK), p38 and cleaved caspase-3, compared with their significant increase after radiation treatment.

The collective results suggest that zebrafish embryotoxicity model is a valuable model for radiation protection drug screening and KRG protects HaCaT cells by blocking ROS generation, inhibiting changes in MMP, and inhibiting the caspase, ATM, p38 and JNK pathways. We suggest that KRG can potentially be used as a protective agent against radiation-induced oral mucositis, which is a common complication of radiotherapy for head and neck cancers.
Keywords

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Theses > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Doctor
Ajou Authors
김, 철호  |  박, 근형
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