This historical review of extracellular vesicles in the setting of exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) traces our understanding of how vesicles were initially examined and reported in the literature in the late 1970s (for secreted exosomes) and early 1980s (for plasma membrane-derived, exfoliated vesicles) to where we are now and where we may be headed in the next decade. An emphasis is placed on biophysical properties of extracellular vesicles, energy consumption and the role of vesiculation as an essential component of membrane turnover. The impact of intercellular signal trafficking by vesicle surface and intra-vesicular lipids, proteins, nucleic acids and metabolites is reviewed in the context of biomarkers for estimating individual radiation dose after exposure to radiation, pathogenesis of disease and development of cell-free therapeutics. Since vesicles express both growth stimulatory and inhibitory molecules, a hypothesis is proposed to consider superposition in a shared space and entanglement of molecules by energy sources that are external to human cells. Implications of this approach for travel in deep space are briefly discussed in the context of clinical disorders that have been observed after space travel.
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August 2024
BIOLOGY|
July 10 2024
Biology of Exfoliation of Plasma Membrane-Derived Vesicles and the Radiation Response: Historical Background, Applications in Biodosimetry and Cell-Free Therapeutics, and Quantal Mechanisms for Their Release and Function with Implications for Space Travel Available to Purchase
Nicholas Dainiak
Nicholas Dainiak
1
Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520
1Corresponding author: Nicholas Dainiak, MD, FACP, Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520; email: [email protected].
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Radiat Res (2024) 202 (2): 328–354.
Article history
Received:
March 21 2024
Accepted:
May 09 2024
Citation
Nicholas Dainiak; Biology of Exfoliation of Plasma Membrane-Derived Vesicles and the Radiation Response: Historical Background, Applications in Biodosimetry and Cell-Free Therapeutics, and Quantal Mechanisms for Their Release and Function with Implications for Space Travel. Radiat Res 1 August 2024; 202 (2): 328–354. doi: https://doi.org/10.1667/RADE-24-00078.1
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