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1.
Chinese hamster V79 cells grown for 20 h in suspension culture form small clusters of cells (spheroids) which are more resistant to killing by ionizing radiation than V79 cells grown as monolayers. This resistance appears to be due to the greater capacity of cells grown in contact to repair radiation damage. Attempts to relate this "contact effect" to differences in DNA susceptibility or DNA repair capacity have provided conflicting results. Two techniques, alkaline sucrose gradient sedimentation and alkaline elution, show no difference in the amounts of radiation-induced DNA single-strand breakage or its repair between suspension or monolayer cells. However, using the alkali-unwinding assay, the rate of DNA unwinding is much slower for suspension cells than for monolayer cells. Interestingly, a decrease in salt concentration or in pH of the unwinding solution eliminates these differences in DNA unwinding kinetics. A fourth assay, sedimentation of nucleoids on neutral sucrose gradients, also shows a significant decrease in radiation damage produced in suspension compared to monolayer cultures. It is believed that this assay measures differences in DNA conformation (supercoiling) as well as differences in DNA strand breakage. We conclude from these four assays that the same number of DNA strand breaks/Gy is produced in monolayer and spheroid cells. However, changes in DNA conformation or packaging occur when cells are grown as spheroids, and these changes are responsible for reducing DNA damage by ionizing radiation.  相似文献   

2.
Cells that have been grown as multicell tumor spheroids exhibit radioresistance compared to the same cells grown in monolayers. Comparison of potentially lethal damage (PLD) repair and its kinetics was made between 9L cells grown as spheroids and confluent monolayers. Survival curves of cells plated immediately after irradiation showed the typical radioresistance associated with spheroid culture compared to plateau-phase monolayers. The dose-modification factor for spheroid cell survival is 1.44. Postirradiation incubations in normal phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), conditioned media, or 0.5 M NaCl in PBS reduced the differences in radiosensitivity between the two culture conditions. Postirradiation treatment in PBS or conditioned medium promoted repair of potentially lethal damage, and 0.5 M NaCl prevented the removal of PLD and allowed the fixation of damage resulting in lower survival. Survival of spheroid and monolayer cells after hypertonic NaCl treatment was identical. NaCl treatment reduced Do more than it did the shoulder (Dq) of the survival curve. PLD repair kinetics measured after postirradiation incubation in PBS followed by hypertonic NaCl treatment was the same for spheroids and for plateau-phase monolayers. The kinetics of PLD repair indicates a biphasic phenomenon. There is an initial fast component with a repair half-time of 7.9 min and a slow component with a repair half-time of 56.6 min. Most of the damage (59%) is repaired slowly. Since the repair capacity and kinetics are the same for spheroids and monolayers, the radioresistance of spheroids cannot be explained on this basis. Evidence indicates that the time to return from a Go (noncycling G1 cells) state to a proliferative state (recruitment) for cells from confluent monolayers and from spheroids after dissociation by protease treatment may be the most important determinant of the degree of PLD repair that occurs. Growth curves and flow cytometry cell cycle analysis indicate that spheroid cells have a lag period for reentry into a proliferative state. Since plating efficiency remains high and unchanging during this period, one cannot account for the delay on the basis of the existence of a large fraction of Go cells which are not potentially clonogenic. The cell cycle progression begins in 6-8 h for monolayer cells and in 14-15 h for spheroids. It is hypothesized that the slower reentry of spheroid cells into a cycling phase allows more time for repair than for the rapidly proliferating monolayer cells.  相似文献   

3.
Chinese hamster V79 cells grown for several hours in suspension culture form spheroids which are more resistant to killing by ionizing radiation than cells grown on petri dishes, a phenomenon known as the "contact effect." Previous results using the alkali-unwinding assay as a measure of DNA damage have implicated differences in DNA conformation as contributing to this effect; spheroid DNA denatures more slowly in dilute alkali than monolayer DNA, perhaps due to the presence of constraints to DNA unwinding. In this paper, the rate of development of radiation resistance is shown to be similar when either cell survival or DNA unwinding is used as an end point. At the midpoint for development of resistance, approximately 10 h, the unwinding kinetics indicate that either half of the cells contain constraints to DNA unwinding, or half of the DNA in all of the cells contains constraints. The latter explanation appears more likely since all cells seem to develop these constraints at the same rate, regardless of position in the cell cycle or the degree of contact with other cells. Results using the microelectrophoresis assay to measure damage to individual nuclei confirm the fact that 10-h cultures show a homogeneous radiation response intermediate between that of monolayers and spheroids. Incubation of cells at room temperature or in the presence of drugs which inhibit cell cycle progression prevents full development of the contact effect. Conversely, incubation of cells in medium containing inhibitors of polyamine synthesis, adenylcyclase, glutathione synthesis, poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase, topoisomerase II, or cell-cell communication does not inhibit development of the contact effect as measured by DNA-unwinding kinetics.  相似文献   

4.
Chinese hamster V79 cells grown as spheroids in roller culture are more radioresistant than those grown as monolayers. The supercoiled structure of chromatin, as salt-extracted nucleoids, has been examined using flow cytometry. Irradiated viable cells from spheroid culture contain restraints to supercoil relaxation that are absent in monolayer cells. Further analysis of the chromatin organization from each growth form shows that the radioresistant spheroid cells contain a DNA-protein matrix that is more resistant to detergent-induced degradation. The increase in structural integrity may be due to the retention of a 55-60 kDa protein that is apparent in the nucleoids of spheroid, but not monolayer cells. The increase in structural integrity of the spheroid cells may explain their greater radioresistance by providing a more stable platform for high-fidelity DNA damage repair.  相似文献   

5.
Using the Chinese hamster cell line B14 FAF28, several specific properties of the contact effect (CE) of radiation action in spheroids were investigated. CE was found to "protect" the spheroid cells against several types of radiation-induced cytogenetic misfunctions such as blockage in S and G2+M-phase, mutagenesis, and chromosome damage. However, repair of DNA strand-breaks was the same in monolayers and spheroids. Furthermore, CE is a property of the single cell and does not depend on the proliferative status (cycling or non-cycling) of the cells. We conclude that CE is the result of a physiological modification of the cells occurring during growth in the three-dimensional spheroid matrix and requiring metabolic cooperation and cyclic AMP for its induction.  相似文献   

6.
Nutrient concentration in the growth medium and trypsin affect cellular radiosensitivity in a manner that is related to cell shape (Reddy, Stevenson, and Lange, Int. J. Radiat. Biol. 55, 105-117 (1989); Reddy and Lange, Radiat. Res. 119, 338-347 (1989]. Hence we hypothesized that the concentration of serum in the medium could influence the X-ray sensitivity of cells and that the spread cells in monolayers and round cells in spheroids may differ in their response to the radiosensitizing effect of trypsin. We compared the X-ray sensitivity of monolayer and spheroid cells grown for 19 +/- 1 h in MEM supplemented with 5 or 15% serum. Cells were trypsinized and plated either immediately before, or 2.5 +/- 0.5 h after, irradiation and incubation for repair in situ. Survival of cells in monolayers and in spheroids was higher in MEM with 5% serum than with 15% serum. Trypsin treatment affected the shape and radiosensitivity of cells in monolayers but not in spheroids. When all cells were grown in the same serum concentration and a 2.5-h postirradiation incubation was allowed prior to trypsinization, the X-ray sensitivity of cells in spheroids was greater than that of cells in monolayers. The survival of cells in spheroids became equal to that of monolayer cells when cells in spheroids were converted to monolayers by placing them in 25-cm2 flasks and allowing them 3 h to attach and spread. Cell cycle distributions were nearly the same in monolayers and spheroids cultured in MEM with 5 or 15% serum. We conclude that: (1) serum concentration in the growth medium and trypsin do appear to contribute to the differences in the radiosensitivity of spheroids and monolayer V79 cells; (2) these differences are associated with changes in cell morphology.  相似文献   

7.
Mammalian cells growing as multicell spheroids, an in vitro model of tumor microregions, have been shown previously to be more resistant than single cells from monolayer cultures to killing by ionizing radiation, hyperthermia, ultrasound, and chemotherapeutic drugs. Although the mechanisms by which cells in spheroids acquire these increased resistances are unknown, available evidence has indicated that intercellular contact mediates the process for ionizing radiation. This investigation was undertaken to evaluate the role of intercellular contact produced during growth of small spheroids on the sensitivity of EMT6/Ro mouse mammary tumor cells to moderate hyperthermia. Increased thermoresistance developed in small spheroids (approximately 70 micron diameter, 25 cells/spheroid), as measured by colony formation, after exposures to different temperatures in the range of 37 to 45 degrees C for periods less than or equal to 2 hr and at 42.5 degrees C for less than or equal to 8 hr. Experiments were performed to determine the relative contributions to this increased thermoresistance of 1) the extent of intercellular contact in spheroids of different cellular multiplicities, 2) differences in membrane damage influenced by trypsin heat treatment sequence, and 3) physiological changes associated with growth of cells as spheroids in suspension compared to monolayer culture. Treatment with trypsin prior to heating sensitized cells to killing by hyperthermia but did not account for the differential thermoresistance between cells from spheroids and monolayers. Spheroid multiplicity in the range of 1.16 to 76.2 cells/spheroid had no significant effect on cell survival after hyperthermia. However, cells grown in spinner suspension culture were more thermoresistant than cells from monolayer cultures and nearly as thermoresistant as cells in spheroids. From these data we conclude that the greater thermoresistance of EMT/Ro cells in spheroids is the result of cellular physiological changes associated with growth in suspension and is not mediated by intercellular contact.  相似文献   

8.
Some cells have been reported to show greater resistance to drugs or radiation when growing with close intercellular contacts in spheroids or in solid tumors than when growing with few intercellular contacts in sparse cultures. In some cases this increased resistance reflects an increased capacity of cells in close contact to repair cytotoxic damage. However, not all tumors show contact effects, and in some tumors and spheroids the increased resistance appears to be produced by environmental factors, such as hypoxia, rather than by changes in the repair capacity of the cells. To assess whether EMT6-Rw cells showed increased intrinsic radioresistance when grown as solid tumors, we compared survival curves for cells in exponentially growing monolayers and in solid tumors in BALB/c mice. To avoid complications arising from regional heterogeneity in oxygenation within solid tumors, these irradiations were performed under conditions of uniform, maximal hypoxia. The two survival curves were indistinguishable. Moreover, survival curves for cells suspended from solid tumors, plated at low densities and irradiated immediately, after 5 h of incubation or after 24 h of incubation, were indistinguishable from one another and were indistinguishable from survival curves for cells suspended from exponentially growing monolayers and irradiated immediately using an identical protocol. It therefore appears that contact effects are insignificant for irradiated EMT6-Rw tumors and that the intrinsic radiosensitivity of these cells is similar in culture and in solid tumors.  相似文献   

9.
When exposed to etoposide, the outer cells from Chinese hamster V79 spheroids are about 10 times more resistant to DNA strand breaks and cell killing than V79 cells grown as monolayers. Previous results have shown that the outer cells of both spheroids and monolayers grow at the same rate and contain the same amount and activity of the target enzyme, topoisomerase II. In order to examine possible mechanisms for this resistance, cell fusion studies were conducted with fluorescent dye-tagged monolayer and spheroid cells. Fused cells were exposed for 30 min to 1.2 μg/ml etoposide and then separated using fluorescence-activated cell sorting into binucleate cells consisting of two monolayer cells, two spheroid cells, or a mixed doublet consisting of one cell of each type. Individual sorted cell doublets were examined for the presence of etoposide-induced DNA strand breaks using the alkaline comet assay. As expected, doublets of monolayer cells were sensitive to etoposide and doublets of spheroid cells were resistant. However, mixed doublets were as resistant to DNA damage by etoposide as spheroid doublets. In comparison, when etoposide- or adriamycin-resistant V79 monolayer cells were fused to the parent monolayer cells, the expected intermediate sensitivity to etoposide was observed for the mixed doublets. We conclude that etoposide resistance associated with the outer cells of spheroids can be “transferred” to produce resistance in monolayer cells. Rapid changes in phosphorylation that can affect topoisomerase II activity or localization, or that can alter chromatin structure, are suggested as possible mechanisms of resistance. In support of this hypothesis, topo IIα phosphorylation was at least 10 times greater in monolayers than in the outer cell layer of spheroids.  相似文献   

10.
Incubation of cells in high salt/alkali typically leads to denaturation and unwinding of DNA, yet DNA from Chinese hamster V79 cells grown for 1 day as spheroids stops unwinding after only 5-10 min. We previously postulated that this was a result of "constraints" to DNA unwinding present in cells in spheroids but not in monolayers, and that these constraints could be responsible for the increased resistance of spheroids of V79 cells to killing by ionizing radiation (i.e., the contact effect). However, studies reported here indicate that this limited DNA unwinding is correlated with a round cell shape and lack of cell surface fibronectin. In round cells which continue to synthesize fibronectin, demonstration of constraints requires prior exposure to trypsin in order to digest cell surface fibronectin. However, trypsin did not influence cell killing by ionizing radiation. Therefore, the increase in radiation resistance of V79 spheroids and the change in their DNA unwinding kinetics both appear contingent upon a change in cell shape; differences in DNA denaturation rates which are detected in spheroids using the unwinding assay are apparently not directly responsible for the contact effect.  相似文献   

11.
DNA damage that is not repaired with high fidelity can lead to chromosomal aberrations or mitotic cell death. To date, it is unclear what factors control the ultimate fate of a cell receiving low levels of DNA damage (i.e. survival at the risk of increased mutation or cell death). We investigated whether DNA damage could be introduced into human cells at a level and frequency that could evade detection by cellular sensors of DNA damage. To achieve this, we exposed cells to equivalent doses of ionizing radiation delivered at either a high dose rate (HDR) or a continuous low dose rate (LDR). We observed reduced activation of the DNA damage sensor ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) and its downstream target histone H2A variant (H2AX) following LDR compared with HDR exposures in both cancerous and normal human cells. This lack of DNA damage signaling was associated with increased amounts of cell killing following LDR exposures. Increased killing by LDR radiation has been previously termed the "inverse dose rate effect," an effect for which no clear molecular processes have been described. These LDR effects could be abrogated by the preactivation of ATM or simulated in HDR-treated cells by inhibiting ATM function. These data are the first to demonstrate that DNA damage introduced at a reduced rate does not activate the DNA damage sensor ATM and that failure to activate ATM-associated repair pathways contributes to the increased lethality of continuous LDR radiation exposures. This inactivation may reflect one strategy by which cells avoid accumulating mutations as a result of error-prone DNA repair and may have a broad range of implications for carcinogenesis and, potentially, the clinical treatment of solid tumors.  相似文献   

12.
We have compared the EGF responses of A431 cells when grown as monolayers at a variety of cell densities or as multicellular spheroids in order to investigate the effects of cell contact and 3-dimensional structure on signal transduction. Proliferation of the A431 squamous carcinoma cell line grown in our laboratory was unaffected by EGF when grown in monolayer culture. As 3-dimensional, multicellular spheroids, however, growth was stimulated by EGF. The maximum volume attainable in the presence of EGF was more than 30 times that in its absence. EGF-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation was compared under these conditions by immunohistochemistry and Western blotting. In initial experiments using published procedures, tyrosine phosphorylation was density-dependent in monolayers and undetectable in spheroids. However, the density-dependence was abolished by the addition of high concentrations of protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitors (1 mM Zn++ and VO4(3)-). The density dependence of EGF-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation in monolayers was, therefore, largely the result of changes in phosphatase activity rather than kinase. Using high concentrations of phosphatase inhibitors, phosphotyrosine was clearly visible by immunohistochemistry in the outermost cells of spheroids, but it was still not visible in the spheroid center. The lack of response within the spheroid was not related to the presence of EGF receptor nor diffusion of EGF. In companion experiments, we showed that staining for EGF receptor was present homogeneously throughout the spheroid and that EGF penetrated to its center under the conditions of the experiment. Thus, although an increase in tyrosine phosphatase activity was a major factor affecting tyrosine phosphorylation in the outer cells, other factors were important in the inner cells. We concluded that an increase of tyrosine phosphatase activity was the most important component of the adaptation of the EGF signal transduction system to high cell density in monolayer cultures. In spheroids, tyrosine phosphatases are also enhanced, but other factors, such as autocrine synthesis of TGF-alpha and possibly the cellular distribution of EGF receptors and cell shape, play a role.  相似文献   

13.
Some cell lines grown for only two cell doublings as multicell spheroids develop a form of resistance to killing by ionizing radiation that has been called the “contact” effect. While our previous results have implicated a role for higher order chromatin structure in the contact effect, another possible explanation is the presence of intercellular gap junctions that might facilitate communication between cells grown as spheroids and thereby enhance the ability of cells to resist or recover from radiation damage. To examine the role of gap junctions in the contact effect, rat glioma C6 and mouse EMT6 cell lines were transfected with a gene encoding the gap junctional protein connexin43. While C6 glioma cells are deficient in gap junctional communication, cells from spheroids were nonetheless more resistant than monolayers to killing by ionizing radiation, and the contact effect was present to a similar extent in the three transfected clones. For mouse EMT6 cells, radiosensitivity was similar whether cells were grown as monolayers or spheroids. Transfection of EMT6 cells with connexin43 increased gap junctional communication but did not promote development of a contact effect. Tumor volume doubling time in SCID mice increased significantly for one transfected clone; however, doubling timein vitrowas also increased relative to the EMT6 parent. We conclude that extensive gap junctional communication is not a requirement for the increased radiation resistance observed when some cell lines are grown as spheroids.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of cell to cell contact during expression of radiation mutation at the HGPRT locus was examined using Chinese hamster V79 spheroids. Spheroids left intact for up to 6 days following 7.5 Gy (and then dissociated into single cells for selection in 6-thioguanine) showed no significant decrease in radiation-induced mutation frequency compared to cells of spheroids dissociated immediately following irradiation and passaged in monolayers during the expression interval. These results suggest that the intimate cell contact which occurs between cells in spheroids does not inhibit mutant expression. However, the cell selection process did appear to reduce mutation frequency when spheroids were left intact for 8 days of expression, or when spheroids received 10 Gy.  相似文献   

15.
The cytotoxic activity of short-chain (C(2)) ceramide was evaluated in human intestinal carcinoma cells grown as multicellular tumor spheroids versus the same cells cultured as monolayers under closely comparable conditions. A decrease in cell number was seen in monolayer cultures of HT-29, Caco-2, and HRT-18 cells, with an EC(50) (concentration for half-maximal toxicity) of between 13 and 23 microM. However, when the same cells were grown in the multicellular spheroid format, C(2) was markedly less potent in reducing cell number, with an EC(50) of between 44 and 63 microM, representing a 1.9- to 4.9-fold decrease in its potency. The chemotherapeutic agents 5-fluorouracil and cisplatin were equally potent against spheroids and monolayer cultures, indicating that although drug access is a problem in conventionally grown tumor spheroids it is not a problem for spheroids grown under the conditions used in this study. Our results suggest that although ceramide is capable of inducing cell death in intestinal carcinoma cells grown in spheroid culture, its cellular toxicity is constrained by influences that are independent of drug access and may be the consequence of the altered cellular relationships. Carcinoma cell populations show an intrinsically decreased responsiveness to the effects of ceramide when they are grown in a three-dimensional culture format.  相似文献   

16.
J Kruuv 《Cryobiology》1986,23(2):126-133
When multicellular spheroids, which simulate small bits of tissue, are exposed to a freeze-thaw (FT) cycle, the survival of the individual cells in the spheroid is higher if the cells of the spheroid are trypsinized and plated as single cells immediately after thawing than if the spheroid is allowed to remain intact for 4 hr and then trypsinized for plating. The results imply either that cell-to-cell contact inhibits repair of potentially lethal damage (PLD) or that accumulation of additional lethal or sublethal damage during the post-thaw period for cells in contact is taking place. Pre- and post-FT trypsinization of single cells indicate that trypsin does not enhance repair of PLD caused by a FT cycle.  相似文献   

17.
DNA recombinational repair, and an increase in its capacity induced by DNA damage, is believed to be the major mechanism that confers resistance to killing by ionizing radiation in yeast. We have examined the nature of the DNA lesions generated by ionizing radiation that induce this mechanism, using two different end points: resistance to cell killing and ability of the error-free recombinational repair system to compete for other DNA lesions and thereby suppress chemical mutation. Under the various conditions examined in this study, the "maximum" inducible radiation resistance was increased approximately 1.5- to 3-fold and suppression of mutation about 10-fold. DNA lesions produced by low-LET gamma rays at doses greater than about 20 Gy given in oxygen were shown to be more efficient, per unit dose, at inducing radioresistance to killing than were lesions produced by neutrons (high-LET radiation). This suggests that DNA single-strand breaks are more important lesions in the induction of radioresistance than DNA double-strand breaks. Oxygen-modified lesions produced by gamma rays (low-LET radiation) were particularly efficient as induction signals. DNA damage due to hydroxyl radicals (OH.) derived from the radiolytic decomposition of H2O produced lesions that strongly induced this DNA repair mechanism. Similarly, OH. derived from aqueous electrons (e-aq) in the presence of N2O also efficiently induced the response. Cells induced to radioresistance to killing with high-LET radiation did not suppress N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG)-generated mutations as well as cells induced with low-LET radiation, supporting the conclusion that the type of DNA damage produced by low-LET radiation is a better inducer of recombinational repair. Surprisingly, however, cells induced with gamma radiation in the presence of N2O that became radioresistant to killing were unable to suppress MNNG mutations. This result indicates that OH. generated via e-aq (in N2O) may produce unusual DNA lesions which retard normal repair and render the system unavailable to compete for MNNG-generated lesions. We suggest that the repairability of these unique lesions is restricted by either their chemical nature or topological accessibility. Attempted repair of these lesions has lethal consequences and accounts for N2O radiosensitization of repair-competent but not incompetent cells. We conclude that induction of radioresistance in yeast by ionizing radiation responds variably to different DNA lesions, and these affect the availability of the induced recombinational repair system to deal with subsequent damage.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract. Development of predictive assays for measuring tumour radiosensitivity has generated much recent interest, particularly with the recognition that tumour cell survival at doses of about 2 Gy may correlate well with tumour curability. Clinical data, however, suggest that overall treatment time may be of considerable significance in radioresponsive tumours, especially for rapidly growing tumours capable of accelerated repopulation. Because neither factor can be repeatedly assessed in human tumours, we used cells growing as multicell spheroids to determine whether the initial radiation response would be predictive for multifraction exposures, or whether other factors including repopulation rate should be considered. Potential problems of hypoxia and reoxygenation were avoided by using small spheroids which had not yet developed radiobiologically hypoxic regions. Repair and redistribution dominated the responses in the first two or three exposures, with repopulation playing a minor role. As the fractionation schedule was extended, however, repopulation between fractions largely determined the number of viable cells per spheroid. We conclude that the radiation response of cells from untreated spheroids provides a general indication of net sensitivity, but that repair and redistribution produces considerable variation in radiosensitivity throughout a fractionation protocol. Ultimately, repopulation effects may dominate the multifraction response.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of hyperthermia, 6 MeV electron radiation and combination of these treatments on cancer cell line DU145 in both monolayer culture and spheroids enriched for prostate cancer stem cells (CSCs). Flowcytometric analysis of the expression of molecular markers CD133+/CD44+ was carried out to determine the prostate CSCs in cell line DU145 grown as spheroids in serum-free medium. Following monolayer and spheroid culture, DU145 cells were treated with different doses of hyperthermia, electron beam and combination of them. The survival and self-renewing of the cells were evaluated by colony formation assay (CFA) and spheroid formation assay (SFA). Flowcytometry results indicated that the percentage of CD133+/CD44+ cells in spheroid culture was 13.9-fold higher than in the monolayer culture. The SFA showed significant difference between monolayer and spheroid culture for radiation treatment (6 Gy) and hyperthermia (60 and 90 min). The CFA showed significantly enhanced radiosensitivity in DU145 cells grown as monolayer as compared to spheroids, but no effect of hyperthermia. In contrast, for the combination of radiation and hyperthermia the results of CFA and SFA showed a reduced survival fraction in both cultures, with larger effects in monolayer than in spheroid culture. Thus, hyperthermia may be a promising approach in prostate cancer treatment that enhances the cytotoxic effect of electron radiation. Furthermore, determination and characterization of radioresistance and thermoresistance of CSCs in the prostate tumor is the key to develop more efficient therapeutic strategies.  相似文献   

20.
DNA damage that escapes repair and blocks replicative DNA polymerases is tolerated by bypass mechanisms that fall into two general categories: error-free template switching and error-prone translesion synthesis. Prior studies of DNA damage responses in Saccharomyces cerevisiae have demonstrated that repair mechanisms are critical for survival when a single, high dose of DNA damage is delivered, while bypass/tolerance mechanisms are more important for survival when the damage level is low and continuous (acute and chronic damage, respectively). In the current study, epistatic interactions between DNA-damage tolerance genes were examined and compared when haploid yeast cells were exposed to either chronic ultraviolet light or chronic methyl methanesulfonate. Results demonstrate that genes assigned to error-free and error-prone bypass pathways similarly promote survival in the presence of each type of chronic damage. In addition to using defined sources of chronic damage, rates of spontaneous mutations generated by the Pol ζ translesion synthesis DNA polymerase (complex insertions in a frameshift-reversion assay) were used to infer epistatic interactions between the same genes. Similar epistatic interactions were observed in analyses of spontaneous mutation rates, suggesting that chronic DNA-damage responses accurately reflect those used to tolerate spontaneous lesions. These results have important implications when considering what constitutes a safe and acceptable level of exogenous DNA damage.  相似文献   

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