T Cells Contribute to Pathological Responses in the Non-Targeted Rat Heart following Irradiation of the Kidneys.
Marek LenarczykAmmar J AlsheikhEric P CohenDörthe SchaueAmy KronenbergAron GeurtsSlade KlawikowskiDavid MattsonJohn E BakerPublished in: Toxics (2022)
Heart disease is a significant adverse event caused by radiotherapy for some cancers. Identifying the origins of radiogenic heart disease will allow therapies to be developed. Previous studies showed non-targeted effects manifest as fibrosis in the non-irradiated heart after 120 days following targeted X-irradiation of the kidneys with 10 Gy in WAG/RijCmcr rats. To demonstrate the involvement of T cells in driving pathophysiological responses in the out-of-field heart, and to characterize the timing of immune cell engagement, we created and validated a T cell knock downrat on the WAG genetic backgrou nd. Irradiation of the kidneys with 10 Gy of X-rays in wild-type rats resulted in infiltration of T cells, natural killer cells, and macrophages after 120 days, and none of these after 40 days, suggesting immune cell engagement is a late response. The radiation nephropathy and cardiac fibrosis that resulted in these animals after 120 days was significantly decreased in irradiated T cell depleted rats. We conclude that T cells function as an effector cell in communicating signals from the irradiated kidneys which cause pathologic remodeling of non-targeted heart.
Keyphrases
- cancer therapy
- heart failure
- radiation induced
- natural killer cells
- atrial fibrillation
- wild type
- social media
- pulmonary hypertension
- early stage
- radiation therapy
- stem cells
- drug delivery
- dendritic cells
- left ventricular
- squamous cell carcinoma
- genome wide
- gene expression
- young adults
- copy number
- bone marrow
- cell therapy