Long-Term Sex- and Genotype-Specific Effects of 56Fe Irradiation on Wild-Type and APPswe/PS1dE9 Transgenic Mice
Author(s)
Schroeder, Maren K.; Liu, Bin; Hinshaw, Robert G.; Park, Mi-Ae; Wang, Shuyan; Dubey, Shipra; Liu, Grace Geyu; Shi, Qiaoqiao; Holton, Peter; Reiser, Vladimir; Jones, Paul A.; Trigg, William; Di Carli, Marcelo F.; Caldarone, Barbara J.; Williams, Jacqueline P.; O’Banion, M. Kerry; Lemere, Cynthia A.; ... Show more Show less
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Space radiation presents a substantial threat to travel beyond Earth. Relatively low doses of high-energy particle radiation cause physiological and behavioral impairments in rodents and may pose risks to human spaceflight. There is evidence that <sup>56</sup>Fe irradiation, a significant component of space radiation, may be more harmful to males than to females and worsen Alzheimer’s disease pathology in genetically vulnerable models. Yet, research on the long-term, sex- and genotype-specific effects of <sup>56</sup>Fe irradiation is lacking. Here, we irradiated 4-month-old male and female, wild-type and Alzheimer’s-like APP/PS1 mice with 0, 0.10, or 0.50 Gy of <sup>56</sup>Fe ions (1GeV/u). Mice underwent microPET scans before and 7.5 months after irradiation, a battery of behavioral tests at 11 months of age and were sacrificed for pathological and biochemical analyses at 12 months of age. <sup>56</sup>Fe irradiation worsened amyloid-beta (Aβ) pathology, gliosis, neuroinflammation and spatial memory, but improved motor coordination, in male transgenic mice and worsened fear memory in wild-type males. Although sham-irradiated female APP/PS1 mice had more cerebral Aβ and gliosis than sham-irradiated male transgenics, female mice of both genotypes were relatively spared from radiation effects 8 months later. These results provide evidence for sex-specific, long-term CNS effects of space radiation.
Date issued
2021-12Department
Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and TechnologyJournal
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Publisher
MDPI AG
Citation
International Journal of Molecular Sciences 22 (24): 13305 (2021)
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1422-0067