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Anti-inflammatory effects of low-dose irradiation often follow a non-linear dose–effect relationship. These characteristics were also described for the modulation of leukocyte adhesion to endothelial cells. Previous results further revealed a contribution of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and anti-oxidative factors to a reduced leukocyte adhesion. Here, we evaluated the expression of anti-oxidative enzymes and the transcription factor Nrf2 (Nuclear factor-erythroid-2-related factor 2), intracellular ROS content, and leukocyte adhesion in primary human microvascular endothelial cells (HMVEC) upon low-dose irradiation under physiological laminar shear stress or static conditions after irradiation with X-ray or Carbon (C)-ions (0–2 Gy). Laminar conditions contributed to increased mRNA expression of anti-oxidative factors and reduced ROS in HMVEC following a 0.1 Gy X-ray and 0.5 Gy C-ion exposure, corresponding to reduced leukocyte adhesion and expression of adhesion molecules. By contrast, mRNA expression of anti-oxidative markers and adhesion molecules, ROS, and leukocyte adhesion were not altered by irradiation under static conditions. In conclusion, irradiation of endothelial cells with low doses under physiological laminar conditions modulates the mRNA expression of key factors of the anti-oxidative system, the intracellular ROS contents of which contribute at least in part to leucocyte adhesion, dependent on the radiation source.
The adult mammalian heart is a non-regenerative organ that fails to recover neither functionally nor structurally after insults. Although, reports show that the presences of mitotic nuclei after pathological or physiological cardiac stress in humans, it is widely accepted that the regenerative capacity of the human heart is immensely inadequate to restore the loss of cardiomyocytes (CMs) (Beltrami et al., 2001; Kajstura et al., 1998). Consequently, myocardial infarctions (MIs) are the primary cause of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. MIs is the irreversible loss of cardiac myocytes due to prolonged myocardial ischemia caused by an imbalance of the metabolic demand of the myocardium and myocardial blood flow (Whelan et al., 2010). Patients with MIs often die prematurely because of heart failure, resulting from irreversible scar formation on the ventricular wall and undermined heart function (Jessup and Brozena, 2003). Despite early intervention and advancements of medical devices for prevention, MIs are still untreatable, unless the heart transplantation approach considered, which is very limited by heart donation (Augoustides and Riha, 2009). Therefore, there is a high demand for standard therapy for heart failure that can restore the loss of CMs, prompt myocardial regeneration, and eventually, reduce morbidity and mortality rate of the disease.
Contrary to the adult mammalian heart, zebrafish display an extraordinary capacity for heart regeneration after the cardiac insult (Poss et al., 2002). This regenerative response relies on the ability of CMs to proliferate and replenish the lost tissue. Zebrafish is indeed one of the most commonly used experimental models for developmental and regenerative biology studies (Gemberling et al., 2013; Gonzalez-Rosa et al., 2017). For decades, the process of cardiac regeneration has been investigated using various cardiac injury models. The most commonly used and well-established injury methods are ventricular apical resection (Poss et al., 2002; Raya et al., 2003), cryoinjury (Chablais et al., 2011; Schnabel et al., 2011), as well as genetic and chemical ablation of heart cells (Curado et al., 2007; Wang et al., 2011). The origin of new cells is one of the most fundamental questions to be addressed during organ regeneration in any regenerative organism, and understanding of such phenomenon is crucial to design effective therapeutic strategies for non-regenerative organisms (Gonzalez-Rosa et al., 2017; Tanaka and Reddien, 2011).
Despite the robust cardiac regenerative potential, to date, only a handful of lineage tracing experiments have been reported in zebrafish heart regeneration. It was proposed that the cellular source of the renewed cardiac tissue might arise from progenitor or stem cells (Lepilina et al., 2006), through CMs dedifferentiation (Jopling et al., 2010; Kikuchi et al., 2010), transdifferentiation from other cell types in the heart tissue, and/or direct proliferation of the existing CMs (Kikuchi and Poss, 2012). Fate-mapping studies using transgenic lines driven by the myl7 promoter have shown that pre-existing CMs contribute to myocardial regeneration. However, myl7 expression is activated at early developmental stages in cardiac progenitor cells and hence precluding the identification of genuinely mature CMs in adult stages. Therefore, the cellular origin of the regenerating CMs remains elusive. Moreover, CM heterogeneity in the developing and adult zebrafish heart has never been explored to provide full insight into the process of regeneration. Therefore, I set out to identify genes exclusively expressed by either immature or mature CMs, generate promoter-driven reporter and CreERT2 lines to characterize the reporters during zebrafish heart development, and regeneration, and eventually to determine the contribution of the immature CMs to the regenerating CMs....