Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5528910 | Mutation Research/Reviews in Mutation Research | 2016 | 87 Pages |
Abstract
The lens of the eye has long been considered as a radiosensitive tissue, but recent research has suggested that the radiosensitivity is even greater than previously thought. The 2012 recommendation of the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) to substantially reduce the annual occupational equivalent dose limit for the ocular lens has now been adopted in the European Union and is under consideration around the rest of the world. However, ICRP clearly states that the recommendations are chiefly based on epidemiological evidence because there are a very small number of studies that provide explicit biological, mechanistic evidence at doses <2Â Gy. This paper aims to present a review of recently published information on the biological and mechanistic aspects of cataracts induced by exposure to ionizing radiation (IR). The data were compiled by assessing the pertinent literature in several distinct areas which contribute to the understanding of IR induced cataracts, information regarding lens biology and general processes of cataractogenesis. Results from cellular and tissue level studies and animal models, and relevant human studies, were examined. The main focus was the biological effects of low linear energy transfer IR, but dosimetry issues and a number of other confounding factors were also considered. The results of this review clearly highlight a number of gaps in current knowledge. Overall, while there have been a number of recent advances in understanding, it remains unknown exactly how IR exposure contributes to opacification. A fuller understanding of how exposure to relatively low doses of IR promotes induction and/or progression of IR-induced cataracts will have important implications for prevention and treatment of this disease, as well as for the field of radiation protection.
Keywords
ICRPIκBLFCFGF2IKKNBNNBSNDRG2ECMOFZLECγH2AXEphA2PTCH1SSBCDKN1ANTEOGG1N-myc downstream-regulated gene 2XPD53BP1P53-binding protein 1MCNPXRCC1PRDX6DNA single strand breakICRUinhibitor of nuclear factor κBMonte Carlo N-particleMedical Internal Radiation Dosexeroderma pigmentosum DRadiation cataractCOX-2BERLNTTGFβNF-κBPI3KMMPDSBTNFαRNSPSC8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1ataxia telangiectasia mutatedCa2+NERROSAdenosine TriphosphateATPadenosine triphosphataseEuropean UnionLETRöntgenUltravioletLinear Energy TransferHESinterleukinATPasehuman embryonic stemChoAtomic bombionizing radiationTransforming growth factor βChinese Hamster OvaryTropomyosinnucleotide excision repairbase excision repairtumor necrosis factor αcomputed tomographyEMTATMLens epithelial cellLens fiber cellNijmegen breakage syndromecyclooxygenase 2DNA double strand breakMIRDfibroblast growth factor 2gap junctionnuclear factor κBPhosphatidylinositol 3-kinaseExtracellular matrixmatrix metalloproteinaseRIBETransitional zonecyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1ANibrinRepperoxiredoxin 6Single nucleotide polymorphismPatched 1SNPposterior subcapsular cataractInternational Commission on Radiological ProtectionconnexinEpithelial-mesenchymal transitionreactive nitrogen speciesReactive oxygen speciesCalcium ions
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Authors
Elizabeth A. Ainsbury, Stephen Barnard, Scott Bright, Claudia Dalke, Miguel Jarrin, Sarah Kunze, Rick Tanner, Joseph R. Dynlacht, Roy A. Quinlan, Jochen Graw, Munira Kadhim, Nobuyuki Hamada,