SIRT1 inhibitors mitigate radiation-induced GI syndrome by enhancing intestinal-stem-cell survival
Publication date
2021-03-31
Authors
Fu, Guoxiang
Chen, Shengzhi
Liang, Liping
Li, Xiaomeng
Tang, Peiyuan
Rao, Xinxin
Pan, Mengxue
Xu, Xiaoya
Li, Yuanchuang
Yao, Ye
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
taverne
Abstract
High-dose radiation exposure induces gastrointestinal (GI) stem cell death, resulting in denudation of the intestinal mucosa and lethality from GI syndrome, for which there is currently no effective therapy. Studying an intestinal organoid-based functional model, we found that Sirtuin1(SIRT1) inhibition through genetic knockout or pharmacologic inhibition significantly improved mouse and human intestinal organoid survival after irradiation. Remarkably, mice administered with two doseages of SIRT1 inhibitors at 24 and 96 h after lethal irradiation promoted Lgr5+ intestinal stem cell and crypt recovery, with improved mouse survival (88.89% of mice in the treated group vs. 0% of mice in the control group). Moreover, our data revealed that SIRT1 inhibition increased p53 acetylation, resulting in the stabilization of p53 and likely contributing to the survival of intestinal epithelial cells post-radiation. These results demonstrate that SIRT1 inhibitors are effective clinical countermeasures to mitigate GI toxicity from potentially lethal radiation exposure.
Keywords
GI syndrome, Intestinal stem cells, Mitigation, Radiation, SIRT1, Taverne, Oncology, Cancer Research, Journal Article
Citation
Fu, G, Chen, S, Liang, L, Li, X, Tang, P, Rao, X, Pan, M, Xu, X, Li, Y, Yao, Y, Zhou, Y, Gao, J, Mo, S, Cai, S, Peng, J, Zhang, Z, Clevers, H, Gao, J & Hua, G 2021, 'SIRT1 inhibitors mitigate radiation-induced GI syndrome by enhancing intestinal-stem-cell survival', Cancer Letters, vol. 501, pp. 20-30. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canlet.2020.12.034