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Structural plasticity of pyramidal cell neurons measured after FLASH and conventional dose-rate irradiation

Dara L. Dickstein*, Richard Zhang, Ning Ru, Marie Catherine Vozenin, Bayley C. Perry, Juan Wang, Janet E. Baulch, Munjal M. Acharya, Charles L. Limoli*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Evidence shows that ultra-high dose-rate FLASH-radiotherapy (FLASH-RT) provides relative protection against normal tissue complications and functional decrements in the irradiated brain. Past work has shown that radiation-induced cognitive impairment, neuroinflammation and reduced structural complexity ofgranule cell neurons were not observed to the same extent after FLASH-RT (> MGy/s) compared to conventional dose-rate (CONV, 0.1 Gy/s) delivery. In this study, we explored the sensitivity of hippocampal CA1 and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) pyramidal neurons to cranial irradiation and dose-rate modulation using electron and confocal microscopy. Neuron ultrastructural analyses by electron microscopy after 10 Gy FLASH- or CONV-RT exposures indicated that irradiation had little impact on dendritic complexity and synapse density in the CA1, but did increase the length and head diameter of smaller non-perforated synapses. Similarly, irradiation caused no change in mPFC prelimbic/infralimbic axospinous synapse density, but reductions in non-perforated synapse diameters. While irradiation resulted in thinner myelin sheaths compared to controls, none of these metrics were dose-rate sensitive. Analysis of fluorescently labeled CA1 neurons revealed no radiation-induced or dose-rate-dependent changes in overall dendritic complexity or spine density, in contrast to our past analysis of granule cell neurons. Super-resolution confocal microscopy following a clinical dosing paradigm (3 × 10 Gy) showed significant reductions in excitatory vesicular glutamate transporter 1 and inhibitory vesicular GABA transporter puncta density within the CA1 that were largely dose-rate independent. Collectively, these data reveal that, compared to granule cell neurons, CA1 and mPFC neurons are relatively more radioresistant irrespective of radiation dose-rate.

Original languageEnglish
Article number41
JournalBrain Structure and Function
Volume230
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2025

Keywords

  • (4–6): FLASH
  • Cranial irradiation
  • Neuron
  • Radiotherapy
  • Structural plasticity

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