How to translate text using browser tools
22 August 2017 Growth Differentiation Factor 11 does not Mitigate the Lethal Effects of Total-Abdominal Irradiation
Sara Duhachek-Muggy, Kruttika Bhat, Erina Vlashi, Frank Pajonk
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Total-body exposure to radiation causes widespread tissue injury. Damage to the hematopoietic and intestinal stem cell compartments is particularly lethal and mitigators of this damage are critical in providing effective treatment. Parabiosis radiation experiments, in which the vasculatures of two rodents are anastomosed prior to irradiation of one of the animals, have shown that there is a circulating factor that protects mice from radiation-induced intestinal death. Recently reported studies have suggested that growth differentiation factor 11 (GDF11) is responsible for the rejuvenation of stem cells observed in parabiosis experiments involving aging mice. In this study, we investigated the efficacy of GDF11 as a potential mitigator of radiation-induced damage to intestinal stem cells. In ex vivo cultures of intestinal organoids, the number of cells expressing the stem cell marker Lgr5 was increased after irradiation and GDF11 supplementation. Further ex vivo studies to assess stem cell function, measured by the ability to grow new crypt-like structures, did not show increased stem cell activity in response to GDF11 treatment. In addition, GDF11 was unable to improve survival of mice subjected to total-abdominal irradiation. These data demonstrate that GDF11 does not mitigate radiation damage to intestinal stem cells.

©2017 by Radiation Research Society
Sara Duhachek-Muggy, Kruttika Bhat, Erina Vlashi, and Frank Pajonk "Growth Differentiation Factor 11 does not Mitigate the Lethal Effects of Total-Abdominal Irradiation," Radiation Research 188(5), 549-555, (22 August 2017). https://doi.org/10.1667/RR14628.1
Received: 16 September 2016; Accepted: 1 July 2017; Published: 22 August 2017
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top