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1.
Radiation-induced HPRT mutants are generally assumed to arise directly from DNA damage that is misrepaired within a few hours after X-irradiation. However, there is the possibility that mutations result indirectly from radiation-induced genomic instability that may occur several days after the initial radiation exposure. The protocols that commonly employ a 5-7 day expression period to allow for expression of the mutant phenotype prior to replating for selection of mutants would not be able to discriminate between mutants that occurred initially and those that arose during or after the expression period. To address this question, we performed a fluctuation analysis in which synchronous or asynchronous populations of human bladder carcinoma cells were treated with single doses of X-irradiation. For comparison, radiation was delivered during the expression period, either from an initial dose of 1.0 Gy followed by two 1.0 Gy doses separated by 24 h or from disintegrations resulting from I125dU incorporated into DNA. The mutation frequency observed at the time of replating was used to calculate the average number of mutants in the initial irradiated culture by assuming that the mutants were induced directly at the time of irradiation. Then, this average number was used to calculate the fraction of the irradiated cultures that would be predicted by a Poisson distribution to have zero mutants. There was reasonably good agreement between the predicted poisson distribution and the observed distribution for the cultures that received single doses. Moreover, as expected, when cultures were irradiated during the expression period, the fraction of the cultures having zero mutants was significantly less than that predicted by a Poisson distribution. These results indicate that most radiation-induced HPRT mutations are induced directly by the initial DNA damage, and are not the result of radiation-induced instability during the 5-7 day expression period.  相似文献   

2.
DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are the most severe lesions induced by ionizing radiation, and unrejoined or misrejoined DSBs can lead to cell lethality, mutations and the initiation of tumorigenesis. We have investigated X-ray- and alpha-particle-induced mutations that inactivate the hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) gene in human bladder carcinoma cells and in hTERT-immortalized human fibroblasts. Fifty to 80% of the mutants analyzed exhibited partial or total deletions of the 9 exons of the HPRT locus. The remaining mutants retained unaltered PCR products of all 9 exons but often displayed a failure to amplify the HPRT cDNA. Hybridization analysis of a 2-Mbp NotI fragment spanning the HPRT gene with a probe 200 kbp distal to the HPRT locus indicated altered fragment sizes in most of the mutants with a wild-type PCR pattern. These mutants likely contain breakpoints for genomic rearrangements in the intronic sequences of the HPRT gene that allow the amplification of the exons but prevent HPRT cDNA amplification. Additionally, mutants exhibiting partial and total deletions of the HPRT exons also frequently displayed altered NotI fragments. Interestingly, all mutations were very rarely associated with interchromosomal exchanges analyzed by FISH. Collectively, our data suggest that intrachromosomal genomic rearrangements on the Mbp scale represent the prevailing type of radiation-induced HPRT mutations.  相似文献   

3.
The aim of this work was to assess whether "modeled microgravity" affects cell response to ionizing radiation, increasing the risk associated with radiation exposure. Lymphoblastoid TK6 cells were irradiated with various doses of gamma rays and incubated for 24 h in a modeled microgravity environment obtained by the Rotating Wall Vessel bioreactor. Cell survival, induction of apoptosis and cell cycle alteration were compared in cells irradiated and then incubated in 1g or modeled microgravity conditions. Modulation of genomic damage induced by ionizing radiation was evaluated on the basis of HPRT mutant frequency and the micronucleus assay. A significant reduction in apoptotic cells was observed in cells incubated in modeled microgravity after gamma irradiation compared with cells maintained in 1g. Moreover, in irradiated cells, fewer G2-phase cells were found in modeled microgravity than in 1g, whereas more G1-phase cells were observed in modeled microgravity than in 1g. Genomic damage induced by ionizing radiation, i.e. frequency of HPRT mutants and micronucleated cells, increased more in cultures incubated in modeled microgravity than in 1g. Our results indicate that modeled microgravity incubation after irradiation affects cell response to ionizing radiation, reducing the level of radiation-induced apoptosis. As a consequence, modeled microgravity increases the frequency of damaged cells that survive after irradiation.  相似文献   

4.
The influence of dose rate on expression time, cell survival and mutant frequency at the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) locus was evaluated in human G(0) peripheral blood lymphocytes exposed in vitro to gamma rays at low (0.0014 Gy/min) and high (0.85 Gy/min) dose rates. A cloning assay performed on different days of postirradiation incubation indicated an 8-day maximum expression period for the induction of HPRT mutants at both high and low dose rates. Cell survival increased markedly with decreasing dose rate, yielding D(0) values of 3.04 Gy and 1.3 Gy at low and high dose rates, respectively. The D(0) of 3.04 Gy obtained at low dose rate could be attributed to the repair of sublethal DNA damage taking place during prolonged exposure to low-LET radiation. Regression analysis of the mutant frequency yielded slopes of 12.35 x 10(-6) and 3.66 x 10(-6) mutants per gray at high and low dose rate, respectively. A dose and dose-rate effectiveness factor of 3.4 indicated a marked dose-rate effect on the induced HPRT mutant frequency. The results indicate that information obtained from in vitro measurements of dose-rate effects in human G(0) lymphocytes may be a useful parameter for risk estimation in radiation protection.  相似文献   

5.
The mutational effects of ionising radiation at the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT) locus were studied in human peripheral blood G(0) phase lymphocytes irradiated in vitro with gamma rays. The presence of radiation induced mutants was assessed by selecting the HPRT mutants every week on the basis of 6-thioguanine resistance up to 1 month after irradiation. A dose-related increase of 14.25x10(-6) mutants/Gy was measured after an expression time of 7 days. After 2 weeks from culture starting the fraction of clonable cells in irradiated and control cell populations decreased, limiting the measurements of mutant frequency. The mutational spectrum of the HPRT gene was determined by PCR analyses in a total of 99 mutant clones derived from irradiated lymphocytes. The independent origin of mutant clones carrying the same mutation was assessed by analysing the TCR gamma gene rearrangements. The results showed a dose-related increase of deletion mutants up to 3Gy, whereas point mutation frequency increased only up to 2Gy. Two preferentially deleted regions were identified; one involving the HPRT exon 3, and another one the 3'-terminal and the 3'-flanking region of the gene. One complex mutation involving a non-contiguous deletion of exons 2-5 and 7/8 was observed among the mutants isolated after 3Gy irradiation.  相似文献   

6.
To investigate the effects of ionizing radiation on an isolated neuronal network without complicating systemic factors, slices of hippocampus from the guinea pig were isolated and studied in vitro. Slices were irradiated with a 60Co source and compared to paired, sham-irradiated controls. Electrophysiological activity in the CA 1 population of pyramidal cells was evoked by stimulation of the stratum radiatum. Analysis of the somatic and dendritic responses suggested sites of radiation damage. Orthodromically evoked activity was significantly decreased in slices receiving greater than 75 Gy gamma radiation. The effects were dose and dose-rate dependent. At 20 Gy/min, doses of 50 Gy and greater produced synaptic impairment while doses of 75 Gy and greater also produced postsynaptic damage (i.e., the ability of the synaptic response to generate an action potential). A lower dose rate, 5 Gy/min, reduced the sensitivity of synaptic damage to radiation exposure; synaptic impairment required a dose of 100 Gy or greater at the lower dose rate. In contrast, postsynaptic damage was not sensitive to dose rate. This study demonstrates that ionizing radiation can directly affect the integrated functional activity of neurons.  相似文献   

7.
The testes of the B6C3F1 hybrid strain mice were irradiated with 0.05 Gy of 16O8+ ion as the pre-exposure dose (D1), and were then irradiated with 2 Gy of 16O8+ ion as challenging radiation dose (D2) at 4 h after per-exposure. Testicular morphology was observed by light microscope at 35th day after radiation. The results showed that irradiation of mouse testes with 2 Gy of 16O8+ ion significantly impaired, mainly reduction of tubule diameter and decrease or loss of germ cells in various developing stages, especially spermatogenic elements. Pre-exposure to a low-dose (0.05 Gy) of 16O8+ ion significantly alleviated above mentioned damage on testicular morphology induced by subsequent a high-dose (2 Gy) radiation.  相似文献   

8.
Cell survival, mutations and chromosomal effects were studied in primary human lymphocytes exposed in G0 phase to a proton beam with an incident energy of 0.88 MeV (incident LET of 28 keV/microm) in the dose range 0.125-2 Gy. The curves for survival and mutations at the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase locus were obtained by fitting the experimental data to linear and linear-quadratic equations, respectively. In the dose interval 0-1.5 Gy, the alpha parameters of the curves were 0.42/Gy and 3.6 x 10(-6) mutants/Gy, respectively. The mutation types at the HPRT locus were analyzed by multiplex-PCR in 94 irradiated and 41 nonirradiated clones derived from T lymphocytes from five healthy donors. All clones showed a normal multiplex-PCR pattern and were classified as point mutations. Chromosome aberration data were fitted as a linear function of dose (alpha = 0.62 aberrations per cell Gy(-1)). By irradiating G0 lymphocytes from a single subject with 28 keV/microm protons and gamma rays, an RBE of 6.07 was obtained for chromosome aberrations. An overinvolvement of chromosome 9 relative to chromosome 7 was found in chromosome breaks after chromosome painting analysis.  相似文献   

9.
10.
This paper (1) presents an analysis of published data on the molecular nature of spontaneously arising and radiation-induced mutations in mammalian somatic cell systems and (2) examines whether the molecular nature and mechanisms of origin of radiation-induced mutations, in mammalian in vivo and in vitro systems, as currently understood, are consistent with expectations based on the biophysical and microdosimetric properties of ionizing radiation. Depending on the test system (CHO cells, human T lymphocytes and human lymphoid cell line TK6), 80-97% of spontaneous HPRT mutations show normal Southern patterns; the remainder is due to gross changes, predominantly partial (intragenic) deletions. Total gene deletions at the HPRT locus are rare except in the TK6 cell line. At the APRT locus in CHO cells, 80-97% of spontaneous mutations are due to base-pair changes, the remainder being, mostly, partial deletions. The latter can extend upstream in the 5' direction but not beyond the APRT gene in the 3' direction. At the human HLA-A locus (T lymphocytes), the percentage of mutations with normal Southern patterns is lower than that for HPRT, and in the range of 50-60%. At the HLA-A locus, mitotic recombination contributes substantially to the mutation spectrum (approximately 30% of mutations recovered) and this is likely to be true of the TK locus in the TK6 cell line as well. With a few exceptions, most of the radiation-induced mutations show altered Southern patterns and are consistent with their being deletions and/or other gross changes (HPRT, 70-90% (CHO); 50-85% (TK6); 50-75% (T lymphocytes); TK, 60-80% (TK6); HLA-A, 80% (T lymphocytes); DHFR, 100% (CHO]. The exceptions are APRT mutations in CHO cells (16-20% of mutants with deletions or other changes) and HPRT mutations in T lymphocytes from A-bomb survivors (15-25%); the latter finding is consistent with the occurrence of in vivo selection against HPRT mutant cells. In cases of HPRT intragenic deletions analyzed (CHO cells and V79 Chinese hamster cells), there is evidence for a non-random distribution of breakpoints. The spontaneous mutation frequencies vary widely, from about 0.04/10(6) cells (sickle cell mutations at the human HBB locus) to 30.8/10(6) cells (HLA-A mutations in T lymphocytes) and are dependent on the locus, the system employed and a number of other factors. Those for the other loci fall between these limits.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
12.
Cells from ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) patients are hypersensitive to the lethal effects of ionizing radiation. To assess radiation mutagenesis in these cells, the SV40-based shuttle vector, pZ189, was used to analyze gamma-ray-induced mutations following the plasmid's replication in AT lymphoblasts. Progenies from the AT line GM2783 exposed to 50 Gy showed a mutation frequency of 7.6 x 10(-3), 63-fold over background; surviving plasmids were 3.4% of control. Both values were essentially the same as those of irradiated plasmids replicated in a normal lymphoblast line, GM606. In addition, pZ189 exposed to 25 Gy of gamma radiation and replicated in another normal lymphoblast line and in cells of two additional AT lymphoblast lines showed similar mutation frequencies and percentages of surviving plasmids. Qualitative comparison of plasmid mutations from AT and normal cells showed no significant differences, indicating that the damaged DNA was repaired with similar fidelity in AT and normal cells. These studies suggest that there is no correlation between the enhanced sensitivity of AT cells to killing by ionizing radiation and gamma-radiation-induced mutagenesis of plasmid DNA processed in these cells.  相似文献   

13.
It is widely accepted that moderate levels of nonionizing electric or magnetic fields, for example 50/60 Hz magnetic fields of about 1 mT, are not mutagenic. However, it is not known whether such fields can enhance the action of known mutagens. To explore this question, a stringent experimental protocol, which included blinding and systematic negative controls, was implemented, minimizing the possibility of observer bias or experimental artifacts. As a model system, we chose to measure mutation frequencies induced by 2 Gy gamma rays in the redox-sensitive hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT) gene in Chinese hamster ovary cells. We tested whether a 12-h exposure to a 60 Hz sinusoidally oscillating magnetic-flux density (Brms = 0.7 mT) could affect the mutagenic effects of ionizing radiation on the HPRT gene locus. We determined that the magnetic-field exposure induced an approximate 1.8-fold increase in HPRT mutation frequency. Additional experiments at Brms = 0.23 and 0.47 mT revealed that the effect was reduced at lower flux densities. The field exposure did not enhance radiation-induced cytotoxicity or mutation frequencies in cells not exposed to ionizing radiation. These results suggest that moderate-strength, oscillating magnetic fields may act as an enhancer of mutagenesis in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

14.
The xanthine oxidoreductase system is one of the major sources of free radicals in many pathophysiological conditions. Since ionizing radiations cause cell damage and death, the xanthine oxidoreductase system may contribute to the detrimental effects in irradiated systems. Therefore, modulation of the xanthine oxidoreductase system by radiation has been examined in the present study. Female Swiss albino mice (7-8 weeks old) were irradiated with gamma rays (1-9 Gy) at a dose rate of 0.023 Gy s(-1) and the specific activities of xanthine oxidase (XO) and xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) were determined in the liver of the animals. The mode and magnitude of change in the specific activities of XO and XDH were found to depend on radiation dose. At doses above 3 Gy, the specific activity of XO increased rapidly and continued to increase with increasing dose. However, the specific activity of XDH was decreased. These findings are suggestive of an inverse relationship between the activity of XO and XDH. The ratio of the activity of XDH to that of XO decreased with radiation dose. However, the total activity (XDH + XO) remained constant at all doses. These results indicate that XDH may be converted into XO. An intermediate form, D/O, appears to be transient in the process of conversion. The enhanced specific activity of XO may cause oxidative stress that contributes to the radiation damage and its persistence in the postirradiation period. Radiation-induced peroxidative damage determined in terms of the formation of TBARS and the change in the specific activity of lactate dehydrogenase support this possibility.  相似文献   

15.
Various markers of radiation-induced DNA damage including DNA oxidation were investigated in peripheral lymphocytes of 23 cancer patients prior to and one week after receiving radiotherapy with a cumulative dose of 54-70 Gy. Exposure to ionizing radiation nonsignificantly increased the ratio 2'deoxy-7-dihydro-8-oxoguanosine/2'deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG/dG) from 1.73 x 10(-5) to 3.33 x 10(-5). Frequencies of micronuclei significantly (p = 0.0003) increased from 6.4 to 38.9 per 1000 cells. The frequency of hypoxanthine-guanine-phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) mutant lymphocytes measured as 6-thioguanine resistant variant cells by 5-bromodeoxyuridine labeling, was elevated eight-fold, from 4.7 x 10(-6) to 36.2 x 10(-6) (p = 0.008) after termination of the radiotherapy, thus showing a clear response to the radiation treatment. No correlation between levels of oxidative DNA damage and frequencies of HPRT mutant lymphocytes or micronuclei could be established.  相似文献   

16.
The metabolic changes that occur in MG-63 osteosarcoma three-dimensional tumor spheroids exposed to 2 Gy of ionizing radiation, a dose that is comparable to radiation therapy, were studied using high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance ((1)H-NMR) spectroscopy. Specifically, the (1)H-NMR spectra of control and exposed MG-63 spheroids were compared. Small spheroids (about 50-80 microm in diameter) with no hypoxic center were used. The spectra of whole MG-63 spheroids as well as the perchloric acid extracts of these systems were evaluated. Cell damage was also examined by lactate dehydrogenase release and changes in cell growth. No cell damage was observed, but numerous metabolic changes took place in spheroids after exposure to ionizing radiation. In particular, significant increases in both CH(2) and CH(3) mobile lipids, considered by many authors as markers of apoptosis and also present in MG-63 spheroids undergoing overt apoptosis, were observed in spheroids irradiated with 2 Gy. However, the chromatin dye Hoechst 33258 and DNA fragmentation assays showed no overt apoptosis up to 7 days after irradiation with this low dose. Thus it is evident that increases in mobile lipids do not always indicate actual cell death. A detailed analysis of the other metabolic changes observed appears to suggest that the cell death program was initiated but not completed. In fact, the completely different behavior of two important cellular defense mechanisms, reduced glutathione and taurine, in spheroids irradiated with 2 Gy and in those undergoing overt apoptosis seems to indicate that these systems are protecting spheroids from actual cell death. In addition, these data also suggest that (1)H-NMR can be used to examine the effects of low doses of ionizing radiation in spheroids, a cell model of great complexity that closely resembles tumors in vivo. The importance of this possibility in relation to reaching the ultimate goal of a better evaluation of the outcome of radiotherapy protocols should not be ignored.  相似文献   

17.
The Escherichia coli supF gene encoding the suppressor tyrosine tRNA in a human shuttle plasmid, pZ189, was used as a target for molecular analysis of X-ray-induced mutations in human lymphoblastoid cells. Following replication of the in vitro-irradiated plasmid in human cells, the mutant supF-containing molecules were cloned by phenotypic screening in E. coli and the nature of the mutations was determined by direct sequencing of the tRNA gene. At 160 Gy the mutant frequency was 13 times (0.39%) that observed in unirradiated controls (0.031%). When control plasmid was replicated directly in E. coli, the mutant frequency was 16 times less than that of the plasmid passaged through the human cells. The distribution of mutations was highly nonrandom and remarkably similar in both irradiated and control DNAs. The majority of the mutations were transitions involving G.C pairs and occurred selectively at most 5'-TC (3'-AG) sequences. These mutations at C's were preferentially distributed in the nontranscribed strand. We propose that mutations in the control plasmid result from oxidative damages that occur during and/or after its incorporation into human cells and that these damages are similar to those induced by ionizing radiation. The hot spots for mutations suggest that the proximate nucleotide sequence and the overall conformation of the target DNA are important in the production and/or processing of these damages during repair and replication.  相似文献   

18.
Radiation-induced bystander effects have been extensively studied at low doses, since evidence of bystander induced cell killing and other effects on unirradiated cells were found to be predominant at doses up to 0.5 Gy. Therefore, few studies have examined bystander effects induced by exposure to higher doses of radiation, such as spatially fractionated radiation (GRID) treatment. In the present study, we evaluate the ability of GRID treatment to induce changes in GRID adjacent (bystander) regions, in two different murine carcinoma cell lines following exposure to a single irradiation dose of 10 Gy. Murine SCK mammary carcinoma cells and SCCVII squamous carcinoma cells were irradiated using a brass collimator to create a GRID pattern of nine circular fields 12 mm in diameter with a center-to-center distance of 18 mm. Similar to the typical clinical implementation of GRID, this is approximately a 50:50 ratio of direct and bystander exposure. We also performed experiments by irradiating separate cultures and transferring the medium to unirradiated bystander cultures. Clonogenic survival was evaluated in both cell lines to determine the occurrence of radiation-induced bystander effects. For the purpose of our study, we have defined bystander cells as GRID adjacent cells that received approximately 1 Gy scatter dose or unirradiated cells receiving conditioned medium from irradiated cells. We observed significant bystander killing of cells adjacent to the GRID irradiated regions compared to sham treated controls. We also observed bystander killing of SCK and SCCVII cells cultured in conditioned medium obtained from cells irradiated with 10 Gy. Therefore, our results confirm the occurrence of bystander effects following exposure to a high-dose of radiation and suggest that cell-to-cell contact is not required for these effects. In addition, the gene expression profile for DNA damage and cellular stress response signaling in SCCVII cells after GRID exposure was studied. The occurrence of GRID-induced bystander gene expression changes in significant numbers of DNA damage and cellular stress response signaling genes, providing molecular evidence for possible mechanisms of bystander cell killing.  相似文献   

19.
Chromosomal aberrations were analyzed using multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization (mFISH) in human peripheral blood lymphocytes after in vitro exposure to gamma rays or accelerated (56)Fe ions (1 GeV/nucleon, 145 keV/microm) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (Upton, NY). Doses of 0.3 and 3 Gy were used for both radiation types. Chromosomes were prematurely condensed by a phosphatase inhibitor (calyculin A) to avoid the population selection bias observed at metaphase as a result of the severe cell cycle delays induced by heavy ions. A total of 1053 karyotypes (G(2) and M phases) were analyzed in irradiated lymphocytes. Results revealed different distribution patterns for chromosomal aberrations after low- and high-LET radiation exposures: Heavy ions induced a much higher fraction of cells with multiple aberrations, while the majority of the aberrant cells induced by low doses of gamma rays contained a single aberration. The high fraction of complex-type exchanges after heavy ions leads to an overestimation of simple-type asymmetrical interchanges (dicentrics) from analysis of Giemsa-stained samples. However, even after a dose of 3 Gy iron ions, about 30% of the cells presented no complex-type exchanges. The involvement of individual chromosomes in exchanges was similar for densely and sparsely ionizing radiation, and no statistically significant evidence of a nonrandom involvement of specific chromosomes was detected.  相似文献   

20.
Male mice were X-irradiated with 3.0 + 3.0 Gy or 5.1 + 5.1 Gy (fractionation interval 24 h). The offspring were screened for dominant cataract and recessive specific locus mutations. In the 3.0 + 3.0-Gy spermatogonial treatment group, 3 dominant cataract mutations were confirmed in 15 551 offspring examined and 29 specific locus mutations were recovered in 18 139 offspring. In the post-spermatogonial treatment group, 1 dominant cataract mutation was obtained in 1120 offspring and 1 recessive specific locus mutation was recovered in 1127 offspring. The induced mutation rate per locus, per gamete, per Gy calculated for recessive specific locus mutations is 2.0 X 10(-5) in post-spermatogonial stages and 3.7 X 10(-5) in spermatogonia. For dominant cataract mutations, assuming 30 loci, the induced mutation rate is 5.0 X 10(-6) in the post-spermatogonial stages and 1.1 X 10(-6) in spermatogonia. In the 5.1 + 5.1-Gy spermatogonial treatment group, 3 dominant cataract mutations were obtained in 11 205 offspring, whereas in 13 201 offspring 27 recessive specific locus mutations were detected in the spermatogonial group. In the post-spermatogonial treatment group no dominant cataract mutation was observed in 425 offspring and 2 recessive specific locus mutations were detected in 445 offspring. The induced mutation rate per locus, gamete and Gy in spermatogonia for recessive specific locus mutations is 2.8 X 10(-5) and for dominant cataract mutations 0.9 X 10(-6). In post-spermatogonial stages, the mutation rate for recessive specific locus alleles is 6.2 X 10(-5). In the concurrent untreated control group, in 11 036 offspring no dominant cataract mutation and in 23 518 offspring no recessive specific locus mutation was observed. Litter size and the number of carriers at weaning have been determined in the confirmation crosses of the obtained dominant cataract mutants as indicators of viability and penetrance effects. Two mutants had a statistically significantly reduced litter size and one mutant had a statistically significantly reduced penetrance.  相似文献   

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