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Extracellular vesicles-derived microRNAs expression as biomarkers for neurological radiation injury: Risk assessment for space exploration.

Space missions pose threats to the health of the astronauts due to long-term exposure to galactic cosmic rays and solar particle events comprised predominantly of medium to high energy protons, energetic helium ions, and energetic high atomic number particles (HZEs). While the tissue-specific effects of radiation have been studied extensively, the changes in exosomal miRNA expression levels in response to acute radiation exposure have not been assessed. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) originate from the host cells and contain nucleic acid and proteins that can modify the physiology of the receiving cells via the transfer of genomic, proteomic, and lipids cargo. Detection and analysis of miRNA cargo of circulating EVs is an emerging method for non-invasive diagnosis and monitoring of neurological disorders. This study characterizes the EV-derived miRNA expression profiles of human astrocytes to identify those that are altered after treatment with 3 Gy proton radiation as biomarkers of neurological radiation injury. The relationship between radiation and miRNA extracellular vesicles expression levels was investigated in human astrocytes after treatment with 3 Gy proton radiation at Willis-Knighton Cancer Center. Microarray analysis was performed using miRNA from the EVs enriched fraction in the cell culture medium collected from sham-control and radiation-treated cells. The exosomal levels of 13 miRNAs were significantly (FDR p < 0.05) down-regulated after exposure to high-energy radiation. The computational analysis identified hsa-miR-762, hsa-let-7c-5p, and has-let-7b-5p regulate the highest number of genes being associated with cognitive, mental, and motor delay. These miRNAs target the same subset of genes (Amd1, CCNF, COX6B, PLXND1) that are associated with epileptic encephalopathy; frontotemporal dementia; mitochondrial complex iv deficiency, and a rare neurological condition (Moebius syndrome) respectively. GO enrichment analysis of the biological processes identified overrepresentation in mRNA polyadenylation and regulation of glutamine and long fatty acids transport. Gene expression analysis confirmed the upregulation of the glutamine synthetase after irradiation. Significant fold enrichment of GO l-glutamine transmembrane transporter activity was identified in the molecular function category as well indicating exosome-mediated regulation of this important pathway after proton radiation exposure.

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