Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Sep 2024)

Low-dose radiation-induced SUMOylation of NICD1 negatively regulates osteogenic differentiation in BMSCs

  • Lei Zhou,
  • Congshu Huang,
  • Chaoji HuangFu,
  • Pan Shen,
  • Yangyi Hu,
  • Ningning Wang,
  • Gaofu Li,
  • Huifang Deng,
  • Tiantian Xia,
  • Yongqiang Zhou,
  • Jiamiao Li,
  • Zhijie Bai,
  • Wei Zhou,
  • Yue Gao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 282
p. 116655

Abstract

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Various biological effects of ionizing radiation, especially continuous exposure to low-dose radiation (LDR), have attracted considerable attention. Impaired bone structure caused by LDR has been reported, but little is known about the mechanism involved in the disruption of bone metabolism. In this study, given that LDR was found to (at a cumulative dose of 0.10 Gy) disturb the serum Mg2+ level and Notch1 signal in the mouse femur tissues, the effects of LDR on osteogenesis and the underlying molecular mechanisms were investigated based on an in vitro culture system for bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs). Our data showed that cumulative LDR suppressed the osteogenic potential in BMSCs as a result of upregulation of Notch1 signaling. Further analyses indicated that the upregulation of NICD1 (Notch1 intracellular domain), the key intracellular domain for Notch1 signaling, under LDR was a consequence of enhanced protein stabilization caused by SUMOylation (small ubiquitin-like modification). Specifically, the downregulation of SENP1 (sentrin/SUMO-specific protease 1) expression induced by LDR enhanced the SUMOylation of NICD1, causing the accumulation of Notch1 signaling, which eventually inhibited the osteogenic potential of BMSCs. In conclusion, this work expounded on the mechanisms underlying the impacts of LDR on bone metabolism and shed light on the research on bone regeneration under radiation.

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