Title: Tissue Radiation Biology
1Tissue Radiation Biology
2Response to irradiation at the tissue level
- Tied to cellular division kinetics
- In general cells have the same sensitivity to
ionizing radiation as far as nuclear injury is
concerned. - The DNA in all mammalian cells has about the same
sensitivity to radiation injury.,
3Response to irradiation at the tissue level
- Difference in response become apparent at the
tissue (organ) level. - These differences in radiation sensitivity are
due to the rate of replication inherent in the
critical cells in that
4"Law" of Bergonie' and Tribondeau
- Radiation has a more rapid (is more effective)
effective against cell that are actively
dividing, are undifferentiated and have a large
dividing future.
5Cell differentiation
- Undifferentiated cells are precursor or stem
cells and have less specialized functions. Their
major role is to reproduce to replace themselves
and to provide cells which mature into more
differentiated cells.
6Modified by Ancel and Vitemberger
- The appearance of radiation damage is dependent
on two factors 1. The biologic stress on the
cell and 2. the conditions to which the cell is
exposed pre and post irradiation - The most important biologic stress is division
therefore rapidly dividing cells express damage
earlier and slowly dividing cells later.
7Cell differentiation
- The more specialized a cells function is, the
more differentiated it is. (examples are the
major organ cells, muscle and neurons - Highly differentiated cell usually have less
reproductive activity than undifferentiated
cells. (examples of undifferentiated cells are
bone marrow cells, intestinal crypt cells and
basal cells of the skin.
8Cell differentiation
- Undifferentiated cells are precursor or stem
cells and have less specialized functions. Their
major role is to reproduce to replace themselves
and to provide cells which mature into more
differentiated cells. - Undifferentiated cells generally are actively
dividing and have a long dividing future.
9Rubin and Casarett
- classification of cellular populations
- based on reproductive kinetics
- These classifications cells is an attempt to
explain the difference in observed cellular and
tissue radiosensitivity based on the reproductive
and functional characteristics of various cell
lines.
10Vegetative Intermitotic Cells.(VIM)
- Undifferentiated rapidly dividing cells which
generally have a quite short life cycle. Examples
are erythroblasts, intestinal crypt cells and
basal cells of the skin. - Essentially continuously repopulated throughout
life.
11Differentiating Intermitotic Cells (DIM)
- Actively mitotic cells with some level of
differentiation. Spermatogonia are a prime
example as well as midlevel cells in
differentiating cell lines. - Have substantial reproductive capability but will
eventually stop dividing or mature into a
differentiate cell line
12Multipotential Connective Tissue Cells
- Cells which divide at irregular intervals often
in response to a need. Relatively long cell life
cycle. - Major examples are fibroblasts although recently
more examples of such cells have been identified
in a number of tissues
13Reverting Postmitotic Cells (RPM)
- does not normally undergo division but can do so
if called upon by the body to replace a lost cell
population. These are generally long lived
cells. - Mature liver cells, pulmonary cells and kidney
cells make are examples of this type of cell.
14Fixed Postmitotic Cells. (FPM)
- These cells do not and cannot divide.
- They are highly differentiated and are highly
specialized in there morphology and function. - May be very long lived or relatively short lived
but replaced by differentiating cells below them
in the cell maturation lines. - Examples are Neurons, muscle cells and RBCs
15Perceived Radiation Sensitivity
- VIM cells are the most sensitive cells to
radiation and FPM cells are most resistant. The
others are of intermediate sensitive in the order
presented. - However, this perception is a product of the
longer cell cycle time in more highly
differentiated cell lines
16Michalowski Classification
- A more modern type of classification which
essentially says the same thing in another way.
17Michalowski Classification
- Stem cells continuously divide and reproduce to
give rise to both new stem cells and cells that
eventually give rise to mature functional cells. - Maturing cells arising from stem cells and
through progressive division eventually
differentiate into an end-stage mature functional
cell. - Mature adult functional cells that do not divide
18(H-type)
- There are many cell types that progress from the
stem cell through the mature cell with
nonreversible steps along the way. These cell
lines are said to be hierarchical (H-type)
populations. - They include bone marrow, intestinal epithelium,
epidermis and many others.
19F-type populations
- There are other cell lines in which the adult
cells can under certain circumstance be induced
to undergo division and reproduce another adult
cell. These cell are said to be flexible tissue
(F-type populations). - Examples include liver parenchymal cells,
thyroid cells and pneumocytes as well as others.
20Michalowski Classification
- These two types represent extremes and there are
many tissues which exhibit characteristics of
both types where mature cells are able to divide
a limited number of times. - The rapidity of response to and hence the
sensitivity to radiation at the tissue level is
dependent on the length of the life cycle and the
reproductive potential of the critical cell line
within that tissue.
21Critical Cells"
- All tissues contain multiple cell types contained
in either the stromal compartment or the
parenchymal compartment. - A cell in either compartment may be the critical
cell.
22Critical Cells"
- the endothelial cells lining the blood vessels
were thought for many years to be the critical
cells in tissues however - "critical cells" have been identified in many
tissues.
23The time required for the tissue to respond to
radiation injury can be predicted on the basis of
the cell cycle kinetics of these critical cells.
24Biologic Factors moderating Cell injury by
irradiation.
- Cell Cycle.
- Intracellular repair
- Hypoxia
25Cell Cycle.
- The point that a cell is in the cell cycle has a
marked influence on its response and survival of
irradiation. - G1 G0 are relatively insensitive to radiation
injury. - S phase is generally considered to be the most
resistant to radiation injury.
26Cycle Phase Influence on Sensitivity
27Intracellular repair
- The shoulder on the cell survival curve indicates
that there is some degree of repair by cells of
radiation injury. - Amount of repair differs between cell lines
- However the rate of repair is the same
28Intracellular Repair
29Intracellular repair
30Intracellular repair
- Studies have shown that although repair can be an
ongoing process, the vast majority of the repair
is finished by 6 hours post irradiation. - Once repair is complete the remaining cell
population will respond to subsequent dose of
radiation as though the original irradiation had
not occurred
31Hypoxia
- Oxygen is a potent preventer of repair
- Hypoxia markedly improves the ability of the
cells to repair radiation injury - However it is quite rare for a normal somatic
cell to be hypoxic.
32Measurement or radiation injury at the tissue
level
- Assay systems are needed to construct survival
and injury curves for irradiation at the tissue
level. - Such assays must be quantifiable
- The effect measured must increase with dose
33Types of Assays
- Clonogenic (related to reproductive potential of
stem cells in the tissue target cell population - Specific tissue functional capability
- Lethality - death of the organism from radiation
of that tissue
34Clonogenic assays
- May be performed in vivo or in vitro
- In an in vitro assay cells are harvested from
tissue irradiated in living tissue and the cells
are grown out in cell culture and the number of
colonies growing out is compared to that for a
control - In vivo assays are performed by evaluation of
cellular reproductive activity in the living
animal
35In Vitro Assays
- Cells harvested from culture and plated out
many, many flasks or dishes - Dishes are irradiated at different levels
- The number of colonies are counted after a
specific time. - of colonies compared to control sample
- Survival curves generated
36In vivo Assays
- Two types
- In Situ Assays
- Transplantation Assays
37In Situ Assays
- The tissue or organ is irradiated in the whole
animal. At a given time after irradiation the
organism (animal or plant) is sacrificed and the
organ of interest is evaluated for cell survival
of the cell of interest. - Classic example is the intestinal crypt cell
studies
38In Situ Assays
- Another example is irradiation of testes and then
assaying the testicle for surviving spermatogonia
in the tubules of the testicle.
39In Situ Assays
- Classically these assays have been used to
evaluate the radiation effects in acutely
responding (rapidly dividing) cell lines such as
the intestinal villi, the testes and the skin. - Recently these types of assays have been extended
to evaluation (slowly dividing) cell lines.
40In situ Assays
- These assays have shown that the Do for slowly
dividing cells in this assay is about 1.5 Gy or
about the same as for the rapidly responding
tissues. The difference in time required for the
cell killing to occur is a manifestation of the
slow turnover rate of the cells.
41In Situ Assays
- Tissue is irradiated in vivo and returned to
subject. - After a period of time the number of viable cell
groups in irradiated area is measured - Generally done in mice as large numbers are
required. - Intestinal and gonadal epithelium are the classic
tissues studied.
42In Situ Assays
- Studies of RPM and FPM tissues and cell lines
requires much longer experiment - May require use of larger more expensive and long
lived animals - These studies are very expensive to do
43Transplantation Assays
- Often used to study tumor sensitivity
- Usually done in immune compromised animals.
- Done to mimic metastatic disease or to remove
immune system effects in live animal
44Transplantation Assays
- Tumor or test tissue is irradiated while still in
donor animal. - Irradiated tissue is then removed and cells
suspended in solution. - Cells then injected into recipient animal
- After a period of growth, the animals are
sacrificed and the number of tissue colonies or
size of colony is measured.
45Functional Assays
- Measure organ functional capacity
- Most organs have clinical functional reserve
- Tests measure complete functional capacity
- Done in a live animal with in situ organs
- Do not require sacrifice of the animal
- Multiple dose levels can be studied
- Measure effect at sub clinical levels.
- Heart, lungs, liver, kidneys applicable
46Functional Assays
- Measure effects of regional irradiation
- Very important in radiation therapy
- Helps predict effects of irradiation plan
- Also used to study effects of ingested
radionuclides either medical or accidental - Useful for studies on effect modifiers such as
chemotherapy.
47Lethality Assays
- Measures clinical effects
- Measures doses required to cause death.
- Whole body irradiation
- Regional body irradiation (brain, heart, liver,
etc. - Generally expressed in terms of death in a
given time. i.e. LD30/90 - 30 of subjects die by 90 days post irradiation