Strategies for discovery of small molecule radiation protectors and radiation mitigators

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Abstract

Mitochondrial targeted radiation damage protectors (delivered prior to irradiation) and mitigators (delivered after irradiation, but before the appearance of symptoms associated with radiation syndrome) have been a recent focus in drug discovery for (1) normal tissue radiation protection during fractionated radiotherapy, and (2) radiation terrorism counter measures. Several categories of such molecules have been discovered: nitroxide-linked hybrid molecules, including GS-nitroxide, GS-nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, p53/mdm2/mdm4 inhibitors, and pharmaceutical agents including inhibitors of the phosphoinositide-3-kinase pathway and the anti-seizure medicine, carbamazepine. Evaluation of potential new radiation dose modifying molecules to protect normal tissue includes: clonogenic radiation survival curves, assays for apoptosis and DNA repair, and irradiation-induced depletion of antioxidant stores. Studies of organ specific radioprotection and in total body irradiation-induced hematopoietic syndrome in the mouse model for protection/mitigation facilitate rational means by which to move candidate small molecule drugs along the drug discovery pipeline into clinical development. © 2012 Greenberger, Clump, Kagan, Bayir, Lazo, Wipf, Li, Gao and Epperly.

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Greenberger, J. S., Clump, D., Kagan, V., Bayir, H., Lazo, J. S., Wipf, P., … Epperly, M. W. (2012). Strategies for discovery of small molecule radiation protectors and radiation mitigators. Frontiers in Oncology, 1(JAN). https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2011.00059

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