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Title: Sensing radiosensitivity of human epidermal stem cells. Author: Rachidi W, Harfourche G, Lemaitre G, Amiot F, Vaigot P, Martin MT. Journal: Radiother Oncol; 2007 Jun; 83(3):267-76. PubMed ID: 17540468. Abstract: PURPOSE: Radiosensitivity of stem cells is a matter of debate. For mouse somatic stem cells, both radiosensitive and radioresistant stem cells have been described. By contrast, the response of human stem cells to radiation has been poorly studied. As epidermis is a radiosensitive tissue, we evaluated in the present work the radiosensitivity of cell populations enriched for epithelial stem cells of human epidermis. METHODS AND MATERIALS: The total keratinocyte population was enzymatically isolated from normal human skin. We used flow cytometry and antibodies against cell surface markers to isolate basal cell populations from human foreskin. Cell survival was measured after a dose of 2Gy with the XTT assay at 72h after exposure and with a clonogenic assay at 2 weeks. Transcriptome analysis using oligonucleotide microarrays was performed to assess the genomic cell responses to radiation. RESULTS: Cell sorting based on two membrane proteins, alpha6 integrin and the transferrin receptor CD71, allowed isolation of keratinocyte populations enriched for the two types of cells found in the basal layer of epidermis: stem cells and progenitors. Both the XTT assay and the clonogenic assay showed that the stem cells were radioresistant whereas the progenitors were radiosensitive. We made the hypothesis that upstream DNA damage signalling might be different in the stem cells and used microarray technology to test this hypothesis. The stem cells exhibited a much more reduced gene response to a dose of 2Gy than the progenitors, as we found that 6% of the spotted genes were regulated in the stem cells and 20% in the progenitors. Using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis software, we found that radiation exposure induced very specific pathways in the stem cells. The most striking responses were the repression of a network of genes involved in apoptosis and the induction of a network of cytokines and growth factors. CONCLUSION: These results show for the first time that keratinocyte populations enriched for stem cells from human epidermis are radioresistant. Based on both repressed and induced genes, we found that the major response of the irradiated stem cell population was the regulation of genes functionally related to cell death, cell survival and apoptosis.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]