Department of Pathology, Section On Comparative Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, Section On Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, and Stich Center for Health Aging and Alzheimer's Prevention, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Geroscience. 2023 Dec;45(6):3371-3379. doi: 10.1007/s11357-023-00812-7. Epub 2023 May 16.
The Wake Forest nonhuman primate (NHP) Radiation Late Effects Cohort (RLEC) is a unique and irreplaceable population of aging NHP radiation survivors which serves the nation's need to understand the late effects of radiation exposure. Over the past 16 years, Wake Forest has evaluated > 250 previously irradiated rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) that were exposed to single total body irradiation (IR) doses of 1.14-8.5 Gy or to partial body exposures of up to 10 Gy (5% bone marrow sparing) or 10.75 Gy (whole thorax). Though primarily used to examine IR effects on disease-specific processes or to develop radiation countermeasures, this resource provides insights on resilience across physiologic systems and its relationship with biological aging. Exposure to IR has well documented deleterious effects on health, but the late effects of IR are highly variable. Some animals exhibit multimorbidity and accumulated health deficits, whereas others remain relatively resilient years after exposure to total body IR. This provides an opportunity to evaluate biological aging at the nexus of resilient/vulnerable responses to a stressor. Consideration of inter-individual differences in response to this stressor can inform individualized strategies to manage late effects of radiation exposure, and provide insight into mechanisms underlying systemic resilience and aging. The utility of this cohort for age-related research questions was summarized at the 2022 Trans-NIH Geroscience Interest Group's Workshop on Animal Models for Geroscience. We present a brief review of radiation injury and its relationship to aging and resilience in NHPs with a focus on the RLEC.
维克森林非人类灵长类动物(NHP)辐射晚期效应队列(RLEC)是一个独特且不可替代的老化 NHP 辐射幸存者群体,它满足了国家对理解辐射暴露后效应的需求。在过去的 16 年中,维克森林评估了超过 250 只先前接受过辐射的恒河猴(Macaca mulatta),这些动物接受过单次全身照射(IR)剂量为 1.14-8.5 Gy 或部分身体照射,剂量高达 10 Gy(骨髓保留 5%)或 10.75 Gy(全胸)。尽管主要用于研究 IR 对特定疾病过程的影响或开发辐射对策,但该资源提供了对生理系统的弹性及其与生物衰老关系的见解。辐射暴露对健康有明确的有害影响,但辐射的晚期效应高度可变。一些动物表现出多种疾病和累积的健康缺陷,而另一些动物在接受全身 IR 照射多年后仍然相对有弹性。这为评估在对压力源的有弹性/脆弱反应的交点处的生物衰老提供了机会。考虑到对这种压力源的反应的个体间差异,可以为管理辐射暴露的晚期效应提供个性化策略,并深入了解系统弹性和衰老的潜在机制。该队列在 2022 年跨 NIH 老年科学兴趣小组的动物模型老龄化科学研讨会上总结了其在与年龄相关的研究问题中的应用。我们简要回顾了辐射损伤及其与 NHP 衰老和弹性的关系,重点介绍了 RLEC。