The action of caffeine on X-irradiated HeLa cells. IX. Hypothermic effects |
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Authors: | L J Tolmach P G Duncan K L Beetham |
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Affiliation: | Department of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63108. |
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Abstract: | ![]() Hypothermic enhancement of the lethal effect of 3.5 Gy of 220-kV X rays in the absence of caffeine as well as in its presence (4 mM) was examined at temperatures between 10 and 34 degrees C in monolayer cultures in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Correction has been made for the toxicity of low temperatures, and of caffeine at low temperatures, by concomitantly measuring cell killing in unirradiated cells. In the absence of caffeine, incubation of irradiated cells for up to 34 h at temperatures in the range 15 to 30 degrees C (or possibly 34 degrees C) enhances killing compared to that observed at 38 degrees C; the amount of enhancement is about the same throughout this range, but is nil at 10 degrees C. The enhanced killing induced by caffeine at 38 degrees C decreases as the temperature is lowered to 15 degrees C; there is no enhancement at 10 degrees C. Less killing is manifested in the range 15 to 25 degrees C in the presence of caffeine than in its absence. Recovery (loss of sensitivity to caffeine) and fixation of potentially lethal damage were studied in late-S/G2-phase cells at reduced temperatures by delaying treatment with caffeine for increasing times after irradiation. As the temperature is progressively lowered to 20 degrees C, less recovery is manifested after 5 h of incubation; no recovery is detected in the range 10 to 20 degrees C. Despite extensive recovery at 34 degrees C, no fixation is observed at that (or any lower) temperature in G2-phase cells: the cells are able to recover essentially fully when returned to 38 degrees C. In addition, responses of unirradiated control series to incubation at low temperatures appear to differ from those reported by others for longer treatment times of different cell systems. |
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