TRAIL agonists rescue mice from radiation-induced lung, skin or esophageal injury.

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Tác giả: Abbas E Abbas, Christopher G Azzoli, Arielle De La Cruz, Payton De La Cruz, Thomas A DiPetrillo, Wafik S El-Deiry, Andrew George, Stephanie L Graff, Marina Hahn, Liz Hernandez Borrero, Kelsey E Huntington, Andres J Klein-Szanto, Paul P Koffer, Seulki Lee, Anna Louie, Sharon I Rounds, Attila A Seyhan, Praveen Srinivasan, Jillian Strandberg, Fabio Tavora, David E Wazer, Evgeny Yakirevich, Leiqing Zhang, Lanlan Zhou

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : The Journal of clinical investigation , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 730358

Radiotherapy can be limited by pneumonitis which is impacted by innate immunity, including pathways regulated by TRAIL death receptor DR5. We investigated whether DR5 agonists could rescue mice from toxic effects of radiation and found two different agonists, parenteral PEGylated trimeric-TRAIL (TLY012) and oral TRAIL-Inducing Compound (TIC10/ONC201) could reduce pneumonitis, alveolar-wall thickness, and oxygen desaturation. Lung protection extended to late effects of radiation including less fibrosis at 22-weeks in TLY012-rescued survivors versus un-rescued surviving irradiated-mice. Wild-type orthotopic breast tumor-bearing mice receiving 20-Gy thoracic radiation were protected from pneumonitis with disappearance of tumors. At the molecular level, radioprotection appeared due to inhibition of CCL22, a macrophage-derived chemokine previously associated with radiation pneumonitis and pulmonary fibrosis. Treatment with anti-CCL22 reduced lung injury in vivo but less so than TLY012. Pneumonitis severity was worse in female versus male mice, and this was associated with increased expression of X-linked TLR7. Irradiated mice had reduced esophagitis characterized by reduced epithelial disruption and muscularis externa thickness following treatment with ONC201 analogue ONC212. The discovery that short-term treatment with TRAIL pathway agonists effectively rescues animals from pneumonitis, dermatitis and esophagitis following high doses of thoracic radiation exposure has important translational implications.
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