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1.
The effect of BrdU incorporation on cell radiosensitivity as well as on the induction of chromosome damage by radiation was studied in plateau-phase xrs-5 cells using the premature chromosome condensation (PCC) method. It is well known that xrs-5 cells are sensitive to ionizing radiation and defective in the repair of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks, chromosome damage, and potentially lethal damage (PLD). Compared to repair-proficient CHO 10B cells, a reduction was observed in the overall BrdU-mediated radiosensitization in plateau-phase xrs-5 cells for the same degree of thymidine replacement. This finding is interpreted with a model for BrdU-induced radiosensitization advanced previously, in which two distinct components act to produce the overall radiosensitization observed. One component involves processes associated with the increase in initial damage (DNA and chromosome) production per unit absorbed dose and causes an increase in the slope of the survival curve, while the second component involves enhanced fixation of radiation-induced damage (PLD) and causes a reduction in the width of the shoulder of the survival curve. It is suggested that in plateau-phase xrs-5 cells, the deficiency in the repair of radiation-induced damage compromises BrdU-mediated radiosensitization by leaving active only the radiosensitization component that is associated with an increase in damage induction. Enhancement of cell killing by BrdU in plateau-phase xrs-5 cells resulted in a decrease in D0, the relative value of which was similar to the relative increase in the production of chromosome damage as measured by the PCC method. The relative values for the change in D0 and the production of chromosome aberrations were similar in plateau-phase CHO 10B and xrs-5 cells, suggesting that the physicochemical and/or biochemical processes associated with this phenomenon are the same in the two cell lines. Radiosensitization of a magnitude similar to that observed in exponentially growing CHO 10B cells was induced by BrdU in exponentially growing xrs-5 cells. This effect is attributed to a partial expression of the repair gene (transiently during S phase in all cells, or throughout the cycle in a fraction of cells) that permits some repair of radiation-induced damage and which is compromised by BrdU.  相似文献   

2.
There is evidence suggesting that radiosensitization induced in mammalian cells by substitution in the DNA of thymidine with BrdU has a component that relies on inhibition of repair and/or fixation of radiation damage. Here, experiments designed to study the mechanism of this phenomenon are described. The effect of BrdU incorporation into DNA was studied on cellular repair capability, rejoining of interphase chromosome breaks, as well as induction and rejoining of DNA double- and single-stranded breaks (DSBs and SSBs) in plateau-phase CHO cells exposed to X rays. Repair of potentially lethal damage (PLD), as measured by delayed plating of plateau-phase cells, was used to assay cellular repair capacity. Rejoining of interphase chromosome breaks was assayed by means of premature chromosome condensation (PCC); induction and rejoining of DNA DSBs were assayed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and induction and rejoining of DNA SSBs by DNA unwinding. A decrease was observed in the rate of repair of PLD in cells grown in the presence of BrdU, the magnitude of which depended upon the degree of thymidine replacement. The relative increase in survival caused by PLD repair was larger in cells substituted with BrdU and led to a partial loss of the radiosensitizing effect compared to cells tested immediately after irradiation. A decrease was also observed in the rate of rejoining of interphase chromosome breaks as well as in the rate of rejoining of the slow component of DNA DSBs in cells substituted with BrdU. The time constants measured for the rejoining of the slow component of DNA DSBs and of interphase chromosome breaks were similar both in the presence and in the absence of BrdU, suggesting a correlation between this subset of DNA lesions and interphase chromosome breaks. It is proposed that a larger proportion of radiation-induced potentially lethal lesions becomes lethal in cells grown in the presence of BrdU. Potentially lethal lesions are fixed via interaction with processes associated with cell cycle progression in cells plated immediately after irradiation, but can be partly repaired in cells kept in the plateau-phase. It is hypothesized that fixation of PLD is caused by alterations in chromatin conformation that occur during normal progression of cells throughout the cell cycle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Mitotic compaction of chromatin was generated by treatment of cells with nocodazole. Alternatively, chromatin structure was altered by incubating cells in 500 mM NaCl. The irradiation response in the dose range of 1-10 Gy was measured by colony assay and by a modified fluorometric analysis of DNA unwinding (FADU) assay which measures the amount of undamaged DNA by EtBr fluorescence. Cell survival curves of irradiated CHO-K1 cells showed that treatment with nocodazole increases radiosensitivity as indicated by a decrease of the mean inactivation dose (D) from 4.446 to 4.376. Nocodazole treatment increased the initial radiation-induced DNA damage detected by the FADU assay from 7% to 13%. In repair-defective xrs1 cells, the same conditions increased the radiosensitivity from 1.209 to 0.7836 and the initial DNA damage from 43% to 57%. Alterations to chromatin structure by hypertonic medium increased radiosensitivity in CHO-K1 cells from of 4.446 to 3.092 and the initial DNA damage from 7% to 15%. In xrs1 cells these conditions caused radiosensitivity to decrease from 1.209 to 1.609 and the initial DNA damage to decrease from 43% to 36%. Disruption of chromatin structure by hypertonic treatment was found to be time-dependent. A threefold increase of exposure time to hypertonic medium from 40 to 120 min increased the initial DNA damage in CHO-K1 cells from 7% to 18% but decreased initial DNA damage in xrs1 cells from 43% to 21%. Perturbation of chromatin structure with hypertonic treatment has been shown to increase the radiosensitivity and the initial DNA damage in repair-competent CHO-K1 cells and decrease the radiosensitivity and DNA damage in repair-defective xrs1 cells. Hypertonic treatment thus abolishes differences in chromatin structure between cell lines and differences in initial DNA damage. Radiosensitivity and initial DNA damage are correlated ( r(2)=0.92; p=0.0026) and this correlation also holds when chromatin compaction is altered. The experiments demonstrate that initial DNA damage and chromatin structure are major determinants of radiosensitivity.  相似文献   

4.
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells were grown to plateau phase in the presence of various amounts of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and treated after irradiation with beta-arabinofuranosyladenine (ara-A), an inhibitor of DNA and potentially lethal damage (PLD) repair, in order to investigate the importance of repair reactions in general and of PLD repair, in particular, on the mechanism of radiosensitization by halogenated pyrimidines. The degree of BrdU-mediated radiosensitization observed in ara-A-treated cells was compared to that of cells incubated after irradiation in the absence of ara-A. A substantial reduction in BrdU-mediated radiosensitization was observed in cells treated with ara-A at concentrations that, when given alone, produced maximum potentiation in cell killing (500-1500 microM). The residual BrdU-mediated radiosensitization observed at high levels of thymidine replacement could be explained by a BrdU-mediated increase in DNA and chromosome damage induction per gray. These findings are similar to those reported previously for a repair-deficient mutant of CHO cells, the xrs-5 cell line, and consistent with the hypothesis that BrdU-mediated radiosensitization has two distinct components, one that derives from an increase in damage induction per gray, and a second one that derives from an effect of BrdU on the repair of radiation-induced damage. It is proposed that the reduction in BrdU-mediated radiosensitization observed in ara-A-treated cells is the result of ara-A-mediated expression of radiation damage, the repair of which would have been otherwise modulated by BrdU. Since ara-A is known to act by fixing a form of radiation-induced PLD (alpha-PLD), we further propose that BrdU acts by fixing alpha-PLD. A synergistic effect in the potentiation of cell killing was observed between ara-A and BrdU when ara-A was given at concentrations below 100 microM. This result suggests that a benefit may be expected in the clinic from the combined application of halogenated pyrimidines with repair inhibitors, if administered at a carefully screened range of concentrations.  相似文献   

5.
The formation of diverse chromosomal aberrations following irradiation and the variability in radiosensitivity at different cell-cycle stages remain a long standing controversy, probably because most of the studies have focused on elucidating the enzymatic mechanisms involved using simple DNA substrates. Yet, recognition, processing and repair of DNA damage occur within the nucleoprotein complex of chromatin which is dynamic in nature, capable of rapid unfolding, disassembling, assembling and refolding. The present work reviews experimental work designed to investigate the impact of chromatin dynamics and chromosome conformation changes during cell-cycle in the formation of chromosomal aberrations. Using conventional cytogenetics and premature chromosome condensation to visualize interphase chromatin, the data presented support the hypothesis that chromatin dynamic changes during cell-cycle are important determinants in the conversion of sub-microscopic DNA lesions into chromatid breaks. Consequently, the type and yield of radiation-induced chromosomal aberrations at a given cell-cycle-stage depends on the combined effect of DNA repair processes and chromatin dynamics, which is cell-cycle-regulated and subject to up- or down-regulation following radiation exposure or genetic alterations. This new hypothesis is used to explain the variability in radiosensitivity observed at various cell-cycle-stages, among mutant cells and cells of different origin, or among different individuals, and to revisit unresolved issues and unanswered questions. In addition, it is used to better understand hypersensitivity of AT cells and to provide an improved predictive G2-assay for evaluating radiosensitivity at individual level. Finally, experimental data at single cell level obtained using hybrid cells suggest that the proposed hypothesis applies only to the irradiated component of the hybrid.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The signature DNA lesion induced by ionizing radiation is clustered DNA damage. Gamma radiation-induced clustered DNA damage containing base lesions was investigated in plasmid DNA under cell mimetic conditions and in two cell lines, V79-4 (hamster) and HF19 (human), using bacterial endonucleases Nth (endonuclease III) and Fpg (formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase). Following irradiation with 60Co γ-rays, induction of double-strand breaks (DSB) and clustered DNA damage, revealed as DSB by the proteins, was determined in plasmid using the plasmid-nicking assay and in cells by either conventional pulsed field gel electrophoresis or a hybridization assay, in which a 3 Mb restriction fragment of the X chromosome is used as a radioactive labeled probe. Enzyme concentrations (30–60 ng/µg DNA) were optimized to minimize visualization of background levels of endogenous DNA damage and DSB produced by non-specific cutting by Fpg and Nth in cellular DNA. 60Co γ- radiation produces a 1.8-fold increase in the yields of both types of enzyme sensitive sites, visualized as DSB compared with that of prompt DSB in plasmid DNA. In mammalian cells, the increase in yields of clustered DNA damage containing either Fpg or Nth sensitive sites compared with that of prompt DSB is 1.4–2.0- and 1.8-fold, respectively. Therefore, clustered DNA damage is induced in cells by sparsely ionizing radiation and their yield is significantly greater than that of prompt DSB.  相似文献   

8.
To investigate the mechanisms of radiation-induced chromosomal instability, cells were irradiated in the presence of the free radical scavengers DMSO, glycerol, or cysteamine, in the presence of DMSO while frozen, or held in confluence arrest post-irradiation to permit cells to repair potentially lethal DNA damage. Clones derived from single progenitor cells surviving each treatment were then analyzed for the subsequent development of chromosomal instability. The presence of scavengers (+/- freezing) during irradiation, and the recovery from potentially lethal damage after irradiation led to an increase in cell survival that was accompanied by a decrease in the initial yield of chromosomal rearrangements. Furthermore, analysis of over 400 clones and 80,000 metaphases indicates that these same treatments reduced the incidence of instability at equitoxic doses when compared to controls irradiated in the absence of scavengers at ambient temperature. Results suggest that preventing reactive species from damaging DNA, promoting chemical repair of ionized DNA intermediates, or allowing enzymatic removal of genetic lesions, represent measures that reduce the total burden of DNA damage and reduce the subsequent onset of radiation-induced genomic instability.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Several types of DNA lesion are induced after ionizing irradiation (IR) of which double strand breaks (DSBs) are expected to be the most lethal, although single strand breaks (SSBs) and DNA base damages are quantitatively in the majority. Proteins of the base excision repair (BER) pathway repair these numerous lesions. DNA polymerase beta has been identified as a crucial enzyme in BER and SSB repair (SSBR). We showed previously that inhibition of BER/SSBR by expressing a dominant negative DNA polymerase beta (polβDN) resulted in radiosensitization. We hypothesized increased kill to result from DSBs arising from unrepaired SSBs and BER intermediates. We find here higher numbers of IR-induced chromosome aberrations in polβDN expressing cells, confirming increased DSB formation. These aberrations did not result from changes in DSB induction or repair of the majority of lesions. SSB conversion to DSBs has been shown to occur during replication. We observed an increased induction of chromatid aberrations in polβDN expressing cells after IR, suggesting such a replication-dependence of secondary DSB formation. We also observed a pronounced increase of chromosomal deletions, the most likely cause of the increased kill. After H2O2 treatment, polβDN expression only resulted in increased chromatid (not chromosome) aberrations. Together with the lack of sensitization to H2O2, these data further suggest that the additional secondarily induced lethal DSBs resulted from repair attempts at complex clustered damage sites, unique to IR. Surprisingly, the polβDN induced increase in residual γH2AX foci number was unexpectedly low compared with the radiosensitization or induction of aberrations. Our data thus demonstrate the formation of secondary DSBs that are reflected by increased kill but not by residual γH2AX foci, indicating an escape from γH2AX-mediated DSB repair. In addition, we show that in the polβDN expressing cells secondary DSBs arise in a radiation-specific and partly replication-dependent manner.  相似文献   

11.
The various aspects of formation and repair of radiation-induced double-strand breaks (DSB) are summarized. Concerning the structure of DSB found in irradiated cells, enzymatic and microdosimetric analysis hints at complex damage of the DNA structure at the position of a DSB. With increasing LET, the DSB damage may be more complex than that induced by low-LET irradiation. Most of the DSB are repaired in the irradiated cell; apparently the kinetics of DSB repair and the fraction of unrejoined DSB determine cell survival or cell death. We do not know the details of the complex machinery of DSB repair; certaintly recombination processes are involved, but there are still contradictions between our current knowledge about the mechanisms of recombinational DSB repair and the observed kinetics.Dedicated to Prof. W. Jacobi on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

12.
Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) competes with thymidine (TdR) for incorporation into DNA of exponentially growing V79-171 cells. Such cells show an enhancement of the radiation response as determined by clonogenic survival and DNA damage measured by filter elution techniques after doses up to 15 Gy. The degree of radiosensitization for both survival and rates of alkaline and neutral elution are dependent on percentage BrdU substitution and independent of whether BrdU is in one strand only (monofilar) or both strands (bifilar) of the DNA duplex: e.g., for 16% BrdU substitution distributed either monofilarly or partially bifilarly, there is an enhancement factor for Do of 1.55. At this percentage substitution, the enhancement factor for the rate of alkaline elution is 1.75 and that for the rate of neutral elution is 1.54. The greater the percentage BrdU substitution, the larger was the enhancement ratio for survival and radiation-induced strand breaks in both monofilarly and bifilarly substituted cells. The increase in cell radiosensitivity caused by BrdU substitution shows a better correlation with the increase in radiation-induced double-strand breaks than with the increase in radiation-induced single-strand breaks.  相似文献   

13.
PURPOSE: The present study aimed at investigating if 2'-2' difluorodeoxycytidine (dFdC) radioenhancement was mediated by an effect on induction and/or repair of radiation-induced DNA DSBs and chromosome aberrations in cells with different intrinsic radiosensitivity. METHODS: Confluent human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma cell lines designated SCC61 and SQD9 were treated with 5 microM dFdC for 3 or 24 h prior to irradiation. DNA DSBs induction and repair were analyzed by PFGE. Radiation-induced chromosome aberrations were examined with a FISH technique. RESULTS: In both cell lines, dFdC did not modify radiation-induced DNA DSBs in a dose range between 0 and 40 Gy. After a single dose of 40 Gy, dFdC affected neither the kinetic of repair nor the residual amount of DNA DSBs up to 4 h after irradiation. Whereas dFdC did not increase the induction of chromosome aberrations, after a single dose of 5 Gy, the percentage of aberrant cells and the number of aberrations per aberrant cells were significantly higher in combination with dFdC. CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that under experimental conditions yielding substantial radioenhancement, dFdC decreases the repair of genomic lesions inducing secondary chromosome breaks but has no effect on DNA DSBs repair as measured by PFGE.  相似文献   

14.
(C57Bl/Cne X C3H/Cne)F1 male mice were irradiated with single acute doses of 0.4 MeV neutrons ranging from 0.05 to 2 Gy, and testis cell suspensions were prepared for cytometric analysis of the DNA content 2-70 days after irradiation. Various cell subpopulations could be identified in the control histogram including mature and immature spermatids, diploid spermatogonia and spermatocytes, tetraploid cells and cells in the S-phase. Variations in the relative proportions of different cell types were detected at each dose and time, reflecting lethal damage induced on specific spermatogenetic stages. The reduction of the number of elongated spermatids 28 days after irradiation was shown to be a particularly sensitive parameter for the cytometrical assessment of the radiosensitivity of differentiating gonia. A D0 value of 0.13 Gy was calculated and compared with data obtained after X-irradiation, using the same experimental protocol. In the latter case a biphasic curve was obtained over the dose range from 0.25 to 10 Gy, possibly reflecting the existence of some cell population heterogeneity. RBE values were estimated at different neutron doses relative to the radiosensitive component of the X-ray curve, and ranged from 3.3 to 4, in agreement with data in the literature. Genotoxic effects were monitored 7 days after irradiation by a dose-dependent increase of the coefficient of variation (CV) values of the round spermatid peak, reflecting the induction of numerical and structural chromosome aberrations, and 14 or 21 days after irradiation by the detection of diploid elongated spermatids, probably arising from a radiation-induced complete failure of the first or second meiotic division.  相似文献   

15.
The assessment of tumor radiosensitivity would be particularly useful in optimizing the radiation dose during radiotherapy. Therefore, the degree of correlation between radiation-induced DNA damage, as measured by the alkaline and the neutral comet assays, and the clonogenic survival of different human tumor cells was studied. Further, tumor radiosensitivity was compared with the expression of genes associated with the cellular response to radiation damage. Five different human tumor cell lines were chosen and the radiosensitivity of these cells was established by clonogenic assay. Alkaline and neutral comet assays were performed in γ-irradiated cells (2-8Gy; either acute or fractionated). Quantitative PCR was performed to evaluate the expression of DNA damage response genes in control and irradiated cells. The relative radiosensitivity of the cell lines assessed by the extent of DNA damage (neutral comet assay) immediately after irradiation (4Gy or 6Gy) was in agreement with radiosensitivity pattern obtained by the clonogenic assay. The survival fraction of irradiated cells showed a better correlation with the magnitude of DNA damage measured by the neutral comet assay (r=-0.9; P<0.05; 6Gy) than evaluated by alkaline comet assay (r=-0.73; P<0.05; 6Gy). Further, a significant correlation between the clonogenic survival and DNA damage was observed in cells exposed to fractionated doses of radiation. Of 15 genes investigated in the gene expression study, HSP70, KU80 and RAD51 all showed significant positive correlations (r=0.9; P<0.05) with tumor radiosensitivity. Our study clearly demonstrated that the neutral comet assay was better than alkaline comet assay for assessment of radiosensitivities of tumor cells after acute or fractionated doses of irradiation.  相似文献   

16.
A cell culture technique for quantitative analysis of radiation-induced chromosome aberrations in somatic cells has been developed and used for the comparison of chromosomal sensitivity of skin cells of mouse and man to 60Co-gamma-rays. This includes culture of irradiated tissues or cells in culture in arginine and isoleucine-deficient medium and subsequent refeeding with complete medium (CM). With this technique, radiation-induced chromosome aberrations can be analyzed selectively in the cells exposed in G1 phase and recovered at their first post-irradiation mitosis. When tested on the human embryonic cells, the dicentric yield was essentially the same whether they were skin cells irradiated in silu or cultured cells at various in vitro passages irradiated in vitro. In contrast, when studied in the skin cells irradiated in silu, mouse embryos and newborns were insensitive to the induction of dicentrics. In young mice on day II however, the sensitivity was at a level comparable to that in human embryonic cells and it was intermediate on day 4. Such embryonic insensitivity of the mouse cells was rapidly lost during serial transfer in vitro; and, when tested at 4th or later subculture generations, mouse and human cells were equally sensitive to the induction of dicentrics. These results suggest that the chromosomal radiosensitivity is essentially the same for mouse and human cells but can be modified by some biological factors, possibly DNA repair mechanisms, which differ between species as well as among the states of differentiation of particular cell types. Special attention was paid to the parellelism between the age-dependent changes in the chromosomal, mutational and carcinogenic radiosensitivities in the mouse. If this parallelism can be carried over to man, human pre-natal irradiation will not present any reduced genetic hazards.  相似文献   

17.
NBS1, a protein essential for DNA double-strand break repair, relocalizes into subnuclear structures upon induction of DNA damage by ionizing radiation, forming ionizing radiation-induced foci. We compared radiation-induced NBS1 foci in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) from 46 sporadic breast cancer patients and 30 healthy cancer-free volunteers. The number of persistent radiation-induced NBS1 foci per nucleus at 24 h after irradiation for patients with invasive cancer was significantly higher than for normal healthy volunteers. The frequency of spontaneous chromosome aberration increased as the number of persistent radiation-induced NBS1 foci increased, indicating that the number of persistent radiation-induced NBS1 foci might be associated with chromosome instability. There was also an inverse correlation between the number of radiation-induced NBS1 foci and the activity of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), which plays an important role in the nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway, another mechanism of DNA DSB repair, indicating a close interrelationship between homologous recombination (HR) and NHEJ in DNA DSB repair. In conclusion, the number of persistent radiation-induced NBS1 foci is associated with chromosomal instability and risk of sporadic breast cancer and hence might be used to select individuals for whom a detailed examination is necessary because of their increased susceptibility to breast cancer, although refinement of the techniques for technical simplicity and accuracy will be required for clinical use.  相似文献   

18.
The induction and rejoining of gamma-ray-induced DNA strand breaks were measured in a Chinese hamster ovary cell line, AA8, and in two radiosensitive clones (EM9 and NM2) derived from it. The kinetics of recovery from sublethal damage (SLD) and potentially lethal damage (PLD) has previously been characterized in each of these lines [vanAnkeren et al., Radiat. Res., 115, 223-237 (1988)]. No significant differences were observed among the cell lines in the yields of either DNA single-strand breaks (SSBs) or double-strand breaks (DSBs) as assayed by filter elution. Data for SSB rejoining in AA8 and NM2 cells irradiated with 7.5 Gy were fit by a biexponential process (t1/2 values of approximately 4 and 80 min). In comparison, SSB rejoining in EM9 cells was initially slower (t1/2 = 10 min) and a higher level of SSBs was unrejoined 6 h after irradiation. DSB rejoining in AA8 cells assayed at pH 9.6 was also biphasic (t1/2 values of 15 and 93 min), although when assayed at pH 7.0, most (approximately 80%) of the damage was rejoined at a constant rate (t1/2 = 45 min) during the first 2 h. EM9 cells exhibited a slower initial rate of DSB rejoining when assayed at pH 9.6 but showed no difference compared with AA8 cells in DSB rejoining when assayed at pH 7.0. These results indicate that radiosensitive EM9 cells, whose kinetics of recovery from SLD and PLD was the same as that of AA8 cells, have a defect in the fast phase of SSB rejoining but no measurable defect in DSB rejoining. Conversely, NM2 cells, which displayed a reduced shoulder width on their survival curve and decreased recovery from SLD, had no demonstrable defects in the rate or extent of rejoining of DSBs or SSBs. When compared with the SLD and PLD data reported previously, these results suggest that there is no direct correlation between either of these recovery processes and the rejoining of SSBs or DSBs as assayed here.  相似文献   

19.
Formation of SCE was studied in lymphocytes irradiated by 60Co gamma-rays at the G1 stage of the first or second mitotic cycles. The yield of SCEs induced by irradiation in the presence of 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) proved to be significantly higher than that obtained in the absence of BrdU. The enhancing influence of BrdU on SCE induction depends on neither replication cycle nor the molecular constitution of chromosomes under irradiation. Direct modification of chromosomal radiosensitivity by BrdU is excluded. The results obtained suggest the interference of free BrdU present in culture medium with processes of DNA reparation at the G1 stage.  相似文献   

20.
The role of DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair in radioresistance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae G1 cells is discussed. The contribution of rapid and slow DNA DSB repair to radioresistance of diploid yeast has been estimated. The contribution of the DNA DSB repair involving no homologous chromosome interaction is shown to be insignificant in comparison with the recombinational repair. The rapid DNA DSB repair efficiency calculation method based on the proposed yeast radiation inactivation model is given. The calculations are in a satisfactory agreement with the experimental data. Possible mechanisms of radiation induction of lethal sectoring in yeast are discussed. This phenomenon is supposed to be due to the DNA DSB processing during vegetative division of irradiated cells. A general scheme of radiation inactivation of yeast cells is proposed.  相似文献   

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