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1.
Teratogenesis in tails and limb digits of fetal mice with varying Trp53 status was examined after exposure of pregnant females to 4 Gy gamma radiation with and without a prior 30-cGy exposure. Prior low-dose exposure modified the teratogenic effects of radiation in a manner dependent upon Trp53 status and gestation time. A 4-Gy exposure on gestation day 11 resulted in tail shortening and digit abnormalities. A 30-cGy exposure 24 h prior to a 4-Gy radiation exposure on day 11 reduced the extent of both digit abnormalities and the tail-shortening effects in Trp53(+/+) fetuses and also reduced tail shortening in Trp53(+/-) fetuses, but to a lesser extent. However, the pre-exposure enhanced the tail-shortening effects of 4 Gy in Trp53(-/-) fetuses. In contrast, a 30-cGy exposure given 24 h prior to a 4-Gy exposure on gestation day 12 had no effect on the reduced tail length resulting from the 4-Gy exposure of Trp53(+/+) or Trp53(+/-) fetuses, but it partly protected Trp53(-/-) fetuses against reduced tail length. A 4-Gy exposure alone on day 12 did not result in any increase in the frequency of digit abnormalities in Trp53(-/-) fetuses so any protective effect of the preirradiation could not be detected. However, the preirradiation did result in protection against in digit abnormalities in Trp53(+/-) fetuses. We conclude that radiation-induced teratogenesis reflects both Trp53-dependent and independent processes that lead to apoptosis, and these respond differently to prior adapting doses.  相似文献   

2.
Trp53 heterozygous mice are radiation-sensitive and cancer-prone. Groups of 7-8-week-old female Trp53 heterozygous mice were exposed to 4 Gy of 60Co gamma radiation at high (0.5 Gy/min) or low (0.5 mGy/min) dose rate. Other groups received 10 or 100 mGy at low dose rate 24 h prior to the 4-Gy dose. Tumor frequency and latency were measured over the animals' life span. Exposure to 10 mGy prior to 4 Gy resulted in a small (approximately 5%) but significant life-span regain and increased latency (approximately 9%) for all malignant tumors taken together, but 100 mGy further reduced life span slightly (approximately 7%). Latency responses were tumor type-specific. The prior 10-mGy exposure resulted in a small (approximately 7%) regain in latency for lymphomas but no change in latency for spinal osteosarcomas. Increasing the adapting dose to 100 mGy eliminated the increase in lymphoma latency and further reduced life span (approximately 8%). A 10-mGy dose prior to 4 Gy at low dose rate had no effects. Adapting exposures had no significant effect on tumor frequency. We conclude that a single low dose induced a small protective response in vivo in Trp53+/- mice, reducing the carcinogenic effects of a subsequent large, high-dose-rate exposure by increasing tumor latency. The upper dose threshold at which low-dose protective effects gave way to detrimental effects was tumor type-specific, as found previously for spontaneous tumors in these same cancer-prone mice (Radiat. Res. 159, 320-327, 2003). However, the upper dose thresholds appear to be lower (below 100 mGy) for radiation-induced tumors than for the same tumors appearing spontaneously.  相似文献   

3.
The radioprotective agent amifostine is a free radical scavenger that can protect cells from the damaging effects of ionising radiation when administered prior to radiation exposure. However, amifostine has also been shown to protect cells from chromosomal mutations when administered after radiation exposure. As apoptosis is a common mechanism by which cells with mutations are removed from the cell population, we investigated whether amifostine stimulates apoptosis when administered after radiation exposure. We chose to study a relatively low dose which is the maximum radiation dose for radiation emergency workers (0.25 Gy) and a high dose relevant to radiotherapy exposures (6 Gy). Mice were administered 400 mg/kg amifostine 30 min before, or 3 h after, whole-body irradiation with 0.25 or 6 Gy X-rays and apoptosis was analysed 3 or 7 h later in spleen and bone marrow. We observed a significant increase in radiation-induced apoptosis in the spleen of mice when amifostine was administered before or after 0.25 Gy X-rays. In contrast, when a high dose of radiation was used (6 Gy), amifostine caused a reduction in radiation-induced apoptosis 3 h post-irradiation in spleen and bone marrow similar to previously published studies. This is the first study to investigate the effect of amifostine on radiation-induced apoptosis at a relatively low radiation dose and the first to demonstrate that while amifostine can reduce apoptosis from high doses of radiation, it does not mediate the same effect in response to low-dose exposures. These results suggest that there may be a dose threshold at which amifostine protects from radiation-induced apoptosis and highlight the importance of examining a range of radiation doses and timepoints.  相似文献   

4.
Role of radioadaptation on radiation-induced thymic lymphoma in mice   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Thymic lymphoma (TL) was observed in different stages of development in 46% of male mice (23/50) following exposure to an acute challenge dose of 2 Gy 60Co γ-rays. With an adapting dose of 1 cGy 24 h prior to the challenge dose of 2 Gy, similar growth of TL was seen in 42.5% of mice (17/40). TL was not found in unirradiated control mice (0/50) or in the group treated with 1 cGy (0/50). Multiple adapting doses for 5 or 10 consecutive days induced TL in 8/50 and 9/50 mice, respectively (17% in average). When multiple adapting doses were followed by the challenge dose, the yield of TL was much lower, 16% (8/50) and 30% (15/30), respectively. By 15, 30, 60, 90, and 120 days after exposure with 3 Gy of 60Co γ-rays, TL developed in 30, 70, 70, 80 and 85% of the female mice, respectively. When mice were conditioned with an adapting dose of 1 cGy 24 h prior to the challenge dose, TL was not found 15 days post-irradiation, while about a 25% reduction in the occurrence of TL was noticed at all other intervals. The results suggested that an adapting dose could play a role in bringing about a change in terms of delay and inhibition of the acute effects of radiation, i.e., the onset of TL in mice.  相似文献   

5.
Covalent DNA-protein crosslinks occur in exponentially growing mouse leukemia cells (L1210) after exposure to ionizing radiation. The amount of DNA-protein crosslinks as measured by a filter binding assay is dose dependent upon X irradiation. Although hyperthermia and radiation in combination are synergistic with respect to cell lethality, the combination does not result in an increase of DNA-protein crosslinks when assayed immediately following treatments. Hyperthermia (43 degrees C/15 min) given prior to radiation does not alter the radiation dose dependency of the amount of initial crosslinking. In addition, the amount of DNA-protein crosslinking produced by heat plus radiation is independent of the length of heating the cells at 43 degrees C. The DNA-protein crosslinks produced by 50-Gy X ray alone are removed after 2 hr at 37 degrees C. However, if hyperthermia (43 degrees C/15 min) is given prior to 100-Gy X ray, the removal of DNA-protein crosslinks is delayed until 4.0 hr after radiation. Phospho-serine and phospho-threonine bonds are not produced with either radiation or the combination of hyperthermia plus radiation as judged by the resistance of the bonds to guanidine hydrochloride. However, hyperthermia plus radiation causes an increase in phosphate to nitrogen type bonding. These results show that radiation alone causes covalent DNA-protein crosslinks. Hyperthermia in combination with radiation does not increase the total amount of the crosslinks but delays the removal of the crosslinks and alters the distribution of the types of chemical bonding. These data suggest that the synergistic action on hyperthermia with radiation is more related to the rate of removal and the type of chemical bonding involved in the covalent DNA-protein crosslinks rather than the amount of DNA-protein crosslinks.  相似文献   

6.
Exposure of rats to 1-15 Gy of gamma radiation induced hyperthermia, whereas exposure to 20-150 Gy produced hypothermia. Since radiation exposure induced the release of prostaglandins (PGs) and histamine, the role of PGs and histamine in radiation-induced temperature changes was examined. Radiation-induced hyper- and hypothermia were antagonized by pretreatment with indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor. Intracerebroventricular administration of PGE2 and PGD2 induced hyper- and hypothermia, respectively. Administration of SC-19220, a specific PGE2 antagonist, attenuated PGE2- and radiation-induced hyperthermia, but it did not antagonize PGD2- or radiation-induced hypothermia. Consistent with an apparent role of histamine in hypothermia, administration of disodium cromoglycate (a mast cell stabilizer), mepyramine (H1-receptor antagonist), or cimetidine (H2-receptor antagonist) attenuated PGD2- and radiation-induced hypothermia. These results suggest that radiation-induced hyperthermia is mediated via PGE2 and that radiation-induced hypothermia is mediated by another PG, possibly PGD2, via histamine.  相似文献   

7.
Exposure of rats to 1-15 Gy gamma radiation (60Co) induced hyperthermia, whereas 20-200 Gy induced hypothermia. Exposure either to the head or to the whole body to 10 Gy induced hyperthermia, while body-only exposure produced hypothermia. This observation indicates that radiation-induced fever is a result of a direct effect on the brain. The hyperthermia due to 10 Gy was significantly attenuated by the pre- or post-treatment with a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin. Hyperthermia was also altered by the central administration of a mu-receptor antagonist naloxone but only at low doses of radiation. These findings suggest that radiation-induced hyperthermia may be mediated through the synthesis and release of prostaglandins in the brain and to a lesser extent to the release of endogenous opioid peptides. The release of histamine acting on H1 and H2 receptors may be involved in radiation-induced hypothermia, since both the H1 receptor antagonist, mepyramine, and H2 receptor antagonist, cimetidine, antagonized the hypothermia. The results of these studies suggest that the release of neurohumoral substances induced by exposure to ionizing radiation is dose dependent and has different consequences on physiological processes such as the regulation of body temperature. Furthermore, the antagonism of radiation-induced hyperthermia by indomethacin may have potential therapeutic implications in the treatment of fever resulting from accidental irradiations.  相似文献   

8.
Acute emesis response to harmful doses of X-rays on frogs (Rana porosa porosa) was examined. Results showed that the number of radioemesis events following exposure to 0.85 Gy was slightly higher than in the sham control animals. The increase in emesis action became more pronounced when the total dose of radiation was raised to 2.5 Gy. Only 1 frog out of a total of 12 did not show vomiting following radiation, while no response was observed in sham control animals. Note that animals in which the low dose rate of radiation was applied to whole body did not display any changes in the emesis response relative to control animals. The present studies, and those by others, showed that a brief dose of X-rays prior to a second exposure to a sub-lethal dose might induce a tolerance to radiation. An additional experiment was conducted to examine whether a small conditioning dose could induce a depression of radioemesis (tolerance) following an exposure to high dose X-ray. With prior exposure to 0.3 Gy, only 1 frog out of a total of 5 frogs vomited as a result of radiation exposure. Suppression of the emetic response became significant when the pre-radiation dose was decreased to 0.1 Gy. On the contrary, increasing the small conditioning dose to 0.5 Gy resulted in a remarkable rise of radiation-induced emesis. This results indicate that exposure to the smaller dose of X-rays elicits a tolerance effect to toxic dose level of radiation.  相似文献   

9.
The induction of thymic lymphomas by whole-body X irradiation with four doses of 1.8 Gy (total dose: 7.2 Gy) in C57BL/6 mice was suppressed from a high frequency (90%) to 63% by preirradiation with 0.075 Gy X rays given 6 h before each 1.8-Gy irradiation. This level was further suppressed to 43% by continuous whole-body irradiation with 137Cs gamma rays at a low dose rate of 1.2 mGy/h for 450 days, starting 35 days before the challenging irradiation. Continuous irradiation at 1.2 mGy/h resulting in a total dose of 7.2 Gy over 258 days yielded no thymic lymphomas, indicating that this low-dose-rate radiation does not induce these tumors. Further continuous irradiation up to 450 days (total dose: 12.6 Gy) produced no tumors. Continuously irradiated mice showed no loss of hair and a greater body weight than unirradiated controls. Immune activities of the mice, as measured by the numbers of CD4+ T cells, CD40+ B cells, and antibody-producing cells in the spleen after immunization with sheep red blood cells, were significantly increased by continuous 1.2-mGy/h irradiation alone. These results indicate the presence of an adaptive response in tumor induction, the involvement of radiation-induced immune activation in tumor suppression, and a large dose and dose-rate effectiveness factor (DDREF) for tumor induction with extremely low-dose-rate radiation.  相似文献   

10.
From studies of the atomic bomb survivors, it is well known that ionizing radiation causes several forms of leukemia. However, since the specific mechanism behind this process remains largely unknown, it is difficult to extrapolate carcinogenic effects at acute high-dose exposures to risk estimates for the chronic low-dose exposures that are important for radiation protection purposes. Recently, it has become clear that the induction of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in CBA/H mice takes place through two key steps, both involving the Sfpi1 gene. A similar mechanism may play a role in human radiation-induced AML. In the present paper, a two-mutation carcinogenesis model is applied to model AML in several data sets of X-ray- and neutron-exposed CBA/H mice. The models obtained provide good fits to the data. A comparison between the predictions for neutron-induced and X-ray-induced AML yields an RBE for neutrons of approximately 3. The model used is considered to be a first step toward a model for human radiation-induced AML, which could be used to estimate risks of exposure to low doses.  相似文献   

11.
Radiation exposure induces acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in humans and mice. Recent studies postulated that AML stem cells of spontaneous human AML arise from hematopoietic stem cells. However, other studies support the possibility that short-lived committed progenitors transform into AML stem cells, accompanied by a particular gene mutation. It remains unclear whether AML stem cells are present in radiation-induced AML, and information regarding AML-initiating cells is lacking. In this study, we identified and analyzed AML stem cells of mice with radiation-induced AML. The AML stem cells were identified by transplanting 100 bone marrow cells from mice with radiation-induced AML. We injected 100 cells of each of seven cell populations corresponding to different stages of hematopoietic cell differentiation and compared the latencies of AMLs induced in recipient mice. The identified radiation-induced AML stem cells frequently displayed similarities in both CD antigen and gene expression profiles with normal common myeloid progenitors. The number of common myeloid progenitor-like AML stem cells was significantly increased in mice with radiation-induced AML, but the progeny of common myeloid progenitors was decreased. In addition, analysis of radiation effects on the hematopoietic system showed that common myeloid progenitor cells were extremely radiosensitive and that their numbers remained at low levels for more than 2?months after radiation exposure. Our results suggest that murine radiation-induced AML stem cells arise from radiosensitive cells at a common myeloid progenitor stage.  相似文献   

12.
Teratogenesis induced by radiation in fetal mice has been closely linked to Trp53-dependent apoptosis. This study examined teratogenesis in tails and limb digits of fetal mice with varying Trp53 status after a 4-Gy radiation exposure, with and without a prior 40.5 degrees C, 60-min heat stress. Irradiation earlier in gestation (day 11) produced greater effects than later (day 12) exposure, but in both cases the maximum teratogenic effect of radiation occurred in Trp53 normal fetuses, the minimum in Trp53 null fetuses, and intermediate effects in Trp53 heterozygotes, indicating dominance of Trp53-dependent apoptosis. Heat stress 24 h prior to irradiation on day 11 did not alter the teratogenic effects in Trp53 normal or heterozygous fetuses, but it reduced effects in the Trp53 null fetuses. Conversely, heat stress immediately before irradiation on day 11 amplified teratogenesis in Trp53 null fetuses, still with only a small or no effect on fetuses with full or partial Trp53 function, respectively. These results indicate little effect of mild heat on Trp53-dependent apoptosis after irradiation, but they also suggest heat-induced amplification of Trp53-independent processes that led to apoptosis when heat was delivered near the time of radiation exposure, and heat-induced protection of that process when sufficient expression time was allowed. However, Trp53-dependent apoptosis, when functional, acted as the ultimate determinant of radiation-induced teratogenic effects during early organogenesis. On gestation day 12, radiation effects were diminished, but heat stress 24 h prior to radiation exposure had a large amplifying effect in Trp53 normal or heterozygous fetuses. In the absence of functional Trp53, the sensitizing effect of the heat was diminished. The results may suggest that at later times in organ development, DNA repair is more active, allowing some cells to escape radiation-induced Trp53-dependent apoptosis. However, heat may be able to significantly inhibit this active repair and increase the teratogenic effect of radiation. A diminished effect in the absence of functional Trp53 is consistent with an influence of heat on inhibiting DNA repair, but with a diminished probability of apoptosis.  相似文献   

13.
Bacteria such as Klebsiella pneumoniae can invade and colonize an immunocompromised host and complicate clinical recovery. In the study reported here, an experimental model of induced pneumonia was developed in 60Co gamma-photon-irradiated mice for the purpose of evaluating efficacy of therapeutic agents. The model was characterized by use of probit analysis of bacterial dose, and microbiologic, and histopathologic results. Bacterial colony-forming-unit (CFU) values producing 50% mortality within 30 days (LD50/30) and their 95% confidence intervals were 4.0 x 10(4) [1.7 x 10(4) - 8.9 x 10(4)] for 0-Gray (Gy)-irradiated mice, 1.9 x 10(4) [7.0 x 10(3) - 4.8 x 10(4)] for 5-Gy-irradiated mice, and 1.0 x 10(3) [2.8 x 10(2) - 3.3 x 10(3)] for 7-Gy-irradiated mice. Probit regression line fits calculated by use of an iterative, weighted least-squares fit, were used to assess a dose-modifying factor (DMF). The DMFs for mortality, compared with that for the 0-Gy dose, with their 95% confidence intervals, were 2.2 [0.63 - 7.7] for the 5-Gy and 38.9 [9.6 -165.0] for 7-Gy doses. The 5-Gy probit line did not significantly differ (P = 0.21) from the 0-Gy probit line (dose ratios did not significantly differ from 1), whereas the 7-Gy probit line differed significantly from the 0-Gy probit line (P < 0.001). These results demonstrate that 7-Gy 60Co gamma-photon radiation in combination with intratracheal K. pneumoniae challenge induces a valid pulmonary infection model in immunocompromised female B6D2F1/J mice.  相似文献   

14.
Within short-terms after exposure to ionizing radiation, CBA and C57Bl/6 male mice were found not only to retain but also to enhance their attractiveness to chemosignals of intact males of the same genotype (syngenic). It was shown that the time period of higher attractiveness increased with the absorbed dose (from 1 to 6 Gy). Within several days after exposure to 6-Gy irradiation, male mice were temporarily unable to discriminate between chemosignals of syngenic and allogenic (alien genotype) individuals. Unlike male mice of the CBA strain, male mice of the C57Bl/6 strain displayed no changes after exposure to 1-Gy irradiation, but the effect of 2-6 Gy was more persistent. These phenomena can be explained by the lower olfactory reactivity combined with higher radiosensitivity of C57Bl/6 mice. Irradiated male mice temporarily lost their olfactory ability to discriminate the genotype of females' volatile secretions and to distinguish between females' and males' volatile secretions.  相似文献   

15.
Protection of DNA from gamma-radiation induced strand breaks by Epicatechin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Epicatechin (EC), a polyphenolic antioxidant compound found in tea, apples and chocolate offered protection to DNA against ionizing radiation induced damages. Under in vitro conditions of radiation exposure, plasmid pBR322 DNA was protected by EC in a concentration dependent manner. The dose modifying factor for 0.2 mM EC for 50% protection of the plasmid DNA was found to be 6.0. EC when administered to mice 1 h prior to exposure to 4 Gy gamma-radiation protected cellular DNA against radiation-induced strand breaks in peripheral blood leukocytes, as revealed in alkaline comet assay studies. Thus, EC was found to protect DNA from gamma-radiation indiced strand breaks under in vitro as well as in vivo conditions of radiation exposure.  相似文献   

16.
In previous studies we have shown that low doses of radiation from incorporated tritiated thymidine can make human lymphocytes less susceptible to the genetic damage manifested as chromatid breakage induced by a subsequent high dose of X rays. We have also shown that this adaptive response to ionizing radiation can be induced by very low doses of X rays (0.01 Gy; i.e., 1 rad) delivered during S phase of the cell cycle. To see if a low dose of X rays could induce this response in cells at other phases of the cell cycle, human lymphocytes were irradiated with 0.01 or 0.05 Gy before stimulation by phytohemagglutinin (G0) or with 0.01 Gy at various times after stimulation (G1), followed by 1.5 Gy (150 rad) at G2 phase. Although G0 lymphocytes failed to exhibit an adaptive response, G1 cells irradiated as early as 4 h after stimulation did show the response. Experiments were also carried out to determine how long the adaptive response induced by 0.01 Gy could persist. A 0.01-Gy dose was delivered to lymphocytes in the first S phase, followed by 1.5 Gy in the same or subsequent cell cycles. Lymphocytes receiving a 1.5-Gy dose at 40, 48, or 66 h after stimulation exhibited an adaptive response, whereas those receiving a 1.5-Gy dose at 90 or 114 h did not. Duplicate cultures containing bromodeoxyuridine showed that at 40 h all the lymphocytes were in their first cell cycle after stimulation, at 48 h half of the lymphocytes were in their first cell cycle and half in their second, and at 66 h 80% of the lymphocytes were in their third cell cycle. Thus the adaptive response persists for at least three cell cycles after it is induced by 0.01 Gy of X rays. In other experiments, the time necessary for maximal expression of the adaptive response was determined by delivering 0.01 Gy at hourly intervals 1-6 h before the 1.5-Gy dose. While a 4-h interval was enough for expression of the adaptive response, shorter intervals were not.  相似文献   

17.
Manganese superoxide dismutase (SOD2)-mediated adaptive processes that protect against radiation-induced micronucleus formation can be induced in cells after a 2-Gy exposure by previously exposing them to either low-dose ionizing radiation (10cGy) or WR1065 (40μM), the active thiol form of amifostine. Although both adaptive processes culminate in elevated levels of SOD2 enzymatic activity, the underlying pathways differ in complexity, with the tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) signaling pathway implicated in the low-dose radiation-induced response, but not in the thiol-induced pathway. The goal of this study was the characterization of the effects of TNFα receptors 1 and 2 (TNFR1, TNFR2) on the adaptive responses induced by low-dose irradiation or thiol exposure using micronucleus formation as an endpoint. BFS-1 wild-type cells with functional TNFR1 and 2 were exposed 24h before a 2-Gy dose of ionizing radiation to either 10cGy or a 40μM dose of WR1065. BFS2C-SH02 cells, defective in TNFR1, and BFS2C-SH22 cells, defective in both TNFR1 and TNFR2 and generated from BFS2C-SH02 cells by transfection with a murine TNFR2-targeting vector and confirmed to be TNFR2 defective by quantitative PCR, were also exposed under similar conditions for comparison. A 10-cGy dose of radiation induced a significant elevation in SOD2 activity in BFS-1 (P<0.001) and BFS2C-SH02 (P=0.005) but not BFS2C-SH22 cells (P=0.433), compared to their respective untreated controls. In contrast, WR1065 significantly induced elevations in SOD2 activity in all three cell lines (P=0.001, P=0.007, P=0.020, respectively). A significant reduction in the frequency of radiation-induced micronuclei was observed in each cell line when exposure to a 2-Gy challenge dose of radiation occurred during the period of maximal elevation in SOD2 activity. However, this adaptive effect was completely inhibited if the cells were transfected 24h before low-dose radiation or thiol exposure with SOD2 siRNA. Under the conditions tested, TNFR1 and 2 inhibition negatively affected the low-dose radiation-induced but not the thiol-induced adaptive responses observed to be mediated by elevations in SOD2 activity.  相似文献   

18.
A flow cytometric, anti-CD71-based method was used to measure peripheral blood reticulocyte and micronucleated reticulocyte frequencies in response to (137)Cs total body irradiation (TBI). In three independent experiments, groups of five female C57BL/6N mice were irradiated at graded doses up to 3 Gy, and peripheral blood specimens were collected at 43 h post-irradiation. Whereas the frequency of reticulocytes declined over the range of doses studied, micronucleated reticulocyte incidence was observed to increase in a dose-dependent manner up to 1 Gy. At doses greater than approximately 1 Gy, micronucleated reticulocyte frequencies declined with increasing exposure. These responses were highly reproducible, with significant effects on reticulocyte and micronucleated reticulocyte frequencies observed for the lowest dose studied (0.125 Gy). A time-course experiment was performed to test whether radiation-induced cell cycle delay may explain saturation of the micronucleated reticulocyte endpoint at doses >1 Gy. For this experiment, groups of four female C57BL/6N mice were exposed to 1, 1.5, or 2 Gy TBI, and blood collection occurred at 12h intervals from 43 to 115 h post-exposure. Reduced reticulocyte frequencies were observed for each dose studied, and the recovery of reticulocytes was increasingly delayed with higher radiation doses. Maximal micronucleated reticulocyte frequencies were observed at 43 or 55 h, with progressively lower values at later time points. At no time did micronucleated reticulocyte frequencies induced by 1.5 or 2 Gy significantly exceed that observed for 1 Gy at 43 h. These time-course data suggest that radiation-induced cell cycle delay cannot account for the micronucleated reticulocyte downturn phenomenon observed at doses greater than 1 Gy. An alternate hypothesis is discussed whereby apoptotic elimination of severely damaged bone marrow erythroid precursors plays a dominant role in saturating the radiation-induced micronucleated reticulocyte response observed for C57BL/6N mice.  相似文献   

19.
Ionizing radiation induces hypothermia in guinea pigs. While systemic injection of the radioprotectant S-2-(3-aminopropylamino)ethylphosphorothioic acid (WR-2721) did not block hyperthermia induced by exposure to 10 Gy of gamma radiation, central administration did attenuate it. The dephosphorylated metabolite of WR-2721, N-(2-mercaptoethyl)-1,3-diaminopropane (WR-1065), accentuated radiation-induced hypothermia by both routes of administration. In brain homogenates, oxygen uptake was inhibited by WR-2721 but elevated by WR-1065. These results suggest that the antagonism of radiation-induced hypothermia found only after central administration of WR-2721 is due to its direct actions and not to its dephosphorylated metabolite and that this effect may be correlated with the inhibition by WR-2721 of oxygen uptake.  相似文献   

20.
To date, there is scant information on in vivo induction of chromosomal damage by heavy ions found in space (i.e. 56Fe ions). For radiation-induced response to be useful for risk assessment, it must be established in in vivo systems especially in cells that are known to be at risk for health problems associated with radiation exposure (such as hematopoietic cells, the known target tissue for radiation-induced leukemia). In this study, the whole genome multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization (mFISH) technique was used to examine the in vivo induction of chromosomal damage in hematopoietic tissues, i.e. bone marrow cells. These cells were collected from CBA/CaJ mice at day 7 following whole-body exposure to different doses of 1 GeV/amu 56Fe ions (0, 0.1, 0.5 and 1.0 Gy) or 137Cs γ rays as the reference radiation (0, 0.5, 1.0 and 3.0 Gy, at the dose rate of 0.72 Gy/min using a GammaCell40). These radiation doses were the average total-body doses. For each radiation type, there were four mice per dose. Several types of aberrations in bone marrow cells collected from mice exposed to either type of radiation were found. These were exchanges and breaks (both chromatid- and chromosome-types). Chromosomal exchanges included translocations (Robertsonian or centric fusion, reciprocal and incomplete types), and dicentrics. No evidence of a non-random involvement of specific chromosomes in any type of aberrations observed in mice exposed to 56Fe ions or 137Cs γ rays was found. At the radiation dose range used in our in vivo study, the majority of exchanges were simple. Complex exchanges were detected in bone marrow cells collected from mice exposed to 1 Gy of 56Fe ions or 3 Gy of 137Cs γ rays only, but their frequencies were low. Overall, our in vivo data indicate that the frequency of complex chromosome exchanges was not significantly different between bone marrow cells collected from mice exposed to 56Fe ions or 137Cs γ rays. Each type of radiation induced significant dose-dependent increases (ANOVA, P < 0.01) in the frequencies of chromosomal damage, including the numbers of abnormal cells. Based upon the linear-terms of dose-response curves, 56Fe ions were 1.6 (all types of exchanges), 4.3 (abnormal cells) and 4.2 (breaks, both chromatid- and chromosome-types) times more effective than 137Cs γ rays in inducing chromosomal damage.  相似文献   

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