CLZ-8, a potent small-molecular compound, protects radiation-induced damages both in vitro and in vivo

Publication date: July 2018Source: Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology, Volume 61Author(s): Tian Feng, Jiyuan Liu, Nan Zhou, Libin Wang, Xueying Liu, Shengyong Zhang, Siwang Wang, Hui ChenAbstractPUMA (p53 up-regulated mediator of apoptosis) is particularly important in initiating radiation-induced damage and apoptosis. It has been shown that inhibition of PUMA can provide a profound benefit for the long-term survival of the mice, without an increased risk of malignancies after irradiation. It becomes to be a potential target for developing an effective treatment aimed to protect cells from lethal radiation. CLZ-8, a novel small-molecular inhibition targeting PUMA, could have considerable protection against cell apoptosis and DNA damage. The aim of the present study is to evaluate CLZ-8′s radioprotective ability to enhance survival rate of mice exposed to gamma radiation, prevent radiation-induced apoptosis, and repair DNA damage in cultured cells. We have determined the best effective dose in vivo is 200 mg/kg. This dose of CLZ-8 administered at 30 min before radiation can notably enhance mice survival rate. CLZ-8 ameliorates radiation-induced HUVEC cells damage and reduces apoptosis counts compared to vehicle-treated cells. Western blotting analysis indicates that CLZ-8 selectively inhibits overexpressed PUMA induced by radiation. The results demonstrate that CLZ-8 ameliorates radiation-induced cell depletion, promotes DNA recovery, and protects mice from radiat...
Source: Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology - Category: Environmental Health Source Type: research