Signaling through TLR5 mitigates lethal radiation damage by neutrophil-dependent release of MMP-9

Author:

Brackett Craig M.ORCID,Greene Kellee F.,Aldrich Alyssa R.,Trageser Nicholas H.,Pal Srabani,Molodtsov Ivan,Kandar Bojidar M.,Burdelya Lyudmila G.,Abrams Scott I.ORCID,Gudkov Andrei V.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractAcute radiation syndrome (ARS) is a major cause of lethality following radiation disasters. A TLR5 agonist, entolimod, is among the most powerful experimental radiation countermeasures and shows efficacy in rodents and non-human primates as a prophylactic (radioprotection) and treatment (radiomitigation) modality. While the prophylactic activity of entolimod has been connected to the suppression of radiation-induced apoptosis, the mechanism by which entolimod functions as a radiomitigator remains poorly understood. Uncovering this mechanism has significant and broad-reaching implications for the clinical development and improvement of TLR5 agonists for use as an effective radiation countermeasure in scenarios of mass casualty resulting from accidental exposure to ionizing radiation. Here, we demonstrate that in contrast to radioprotection, neutrophils are essential for the radiomitigative activity of entolimod in a mouse model of lethal ARS. Neutrophils express functional TLR5 and rapidly exit the bone marrow (BM), accumulate in solid tissues, and release MMP-9 following TLR5 stimulation which is accompanied by an increase in the number of active hematopoietic pluripotent precursors (HPPs) in the BM. Importantly, recombinant MMP-9 by itself has radiomitigative activity and, in the absence of neutrophils, accelerates the recovery of the hematopoietic system. Unveiling this novel TLR5-neutrophil-MMP-9 axis of radiomitigation opens new opportunities for the development of efficacious radiation countermeasures to treat ARS following accidental radiation disasters.

Funder

Cleveland BioLabs, Inc. NCI Cancer Center Support Grant

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Cell Biology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Immunology

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