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1.
In space, astronauts are exposed to radiation fields consisting of energetic protons and high atomic number, high-energy (HZE) particles at very low dose rates or fluences. Under these conditions, it is likely that, in addition to cells in an astronaut's body being traversed by ionizing radiation particles, unirradiated cells can also receive intercellular bystander signals from irradiated cells. Thus this study was designed to determine the dependence of DNA damage induction on dose at very low fluences of charged particles. Novel techniques to quantify particle fluence have been developed at the NASA Space Radiation Biology Laboratory (NSRL) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL). The approach uses a large ionization chamber to visualize the radiation beam coupled with a scintillation counter to measure fluence. This development has allowed us to irradiate cells with 1 GeV/nucleon protons and iron ions at particle fluences as low as 200 particles/cm(2) and quantify biological responses. Our results show an increased fraction of cells with DNA damage in both the irradiated population and bystander cells sharing medium with irradiated cells after low fluences. The fraction of cells with damage, manifest as micronucleus formation and 53BP1 focus induction, is about 2-fold higher than background at doses as low as ~0.47 mGy iron ions (~0.02 iron ions/cell) or ~70 μGy protons (~2 protons/cell). In the irradiated population, irrespective of radiation type, the fraction of damaged cells is constant from the lowest damaging fluence to about 1 cGy, above which the fraction of damaged cells increases with dose. In the bystander population, the level of damage is the same as in the irradiated population up to 1 cGy, but it does not increase above that plateau level with increasing dose. The data suggest that at fluences of high-energy protons or iron ions less than about 5 cGy, the response in irradiated cell populations may be dominated by the bystander response.  相似文献   

2.
To assess the lethal doses of gamma radiation and corresponding apoptotic response in new established human melanoma cell lines we exposed exponentially growing cultures to 8-100 Gy gamma radiation. The apoptosis and cell survival were determined by trypan blue exclusion, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) reaction, agarose gel electrophoresis, colony forming assay, and long-term survival assay. The maximal DNA fragmentation 3 days after irradiation was observed in cultures irradiated with 20 Gy (36.9% TUNEL positive cells). The cultures irradiated with 50 and 100 Gy contained 18.7% and 16.4% TUNEL positive cells, respectively. Cultures exposed to 8 and 20 Gy gamma radiation recovered by week 3-4. Lethally irradiated (50 and 100 Gy) cultures which contained less apoptotic cells by day 3 died by week 5. A detectable increase in melanoma cell pigmentation after irradiation was also observed. The survival of human melanoma cell cultures after exposure to gamma radiation does not correlate with the level of apoptotic cells by day 3. At high radiation doses (> 50 Gy) when the radiation induced cell pigmentation is not inhibited the processes of apoptotic DNA fragmentation might be preferentially inactivated.  相似文献   

3.
The goal of this study was to compare the effects of acute 2 Gy irradiation with photons (0.8 Gy/min) or protons (0.9 Gy/min), both with and without pre-exposure to low-dose/low-dose-rate γ rays (0.01 Gy at 0.03 cGy/h), on 84 genes involved in stem cell differentiation or regulation in mouse lungs on days 21 and 56. Genes with a ≥1.5-fold difference in expression and P < 0.05 compared to 0 Gy controls are emphasized. Two proteins specific for lung stem cells/progenitors responsible for local tissue repair were also compared. Overall, striking differences were present between protons and photons in modulating the genes. More genes were affected by protons than by photons (22 compared to 2 and 6 compared to 2 on day 21 and day 56, respectively) compared to 0 Gy. Preirradiation with low-dose-rate γ rays enhanced the acute photon-induced gene modulation on day 21 (11 compared to 2), and all 11 genes were significantly downregulated on day 56. On day 21, seven genes (aldh2, bmp2, cdc2a, col1a1, dll1, foxa2 and notch1) were upregulated in response to most of the radiation regimens. Immunoreactivity of Clara cell secretory protein was enhanced by all radiation regimens. The number of alveolar type 2 cells positive for prosurfactant protein C in irradiated groups was higher on day 56 (12.4-14.6 cells/100) than on day 21 (8.5-11.2 cells/100) (P < 0.05). Taken together, these results showed that acute photons and protons induced different gene expression profiles in the lungs and that pre-exposure to low-dose-rate γ rays sometimes had modulatory effects. In addition, proteins associated with lung-specific stem cells/progenitors were highly sensitive to radiation.  相似文献   

4.
Health risks due to exposure to low-dose/low-dose-rate radiation alone or when combined with acute irradiation are not yet clearly defined. This study quantified the effects of protracted exposure to low-dose/low-dose-rate γ rays with and without acute exposure to protons on the response of immune and other cell populations. C57BL/6 mice were irradiated with ??Co (0.05 Gy at 0.025 cGy/h); subsets were subsequently exposed to high-dose/high-dose-rate proton radiation (250 MeV; 2 or 3 Gy at 0.5 Gy/min). Analyses were performed at 4 and 17 days postexposure. Spleen and thymus masses relative to body mass were decreased on day 4 after proton irradiation with or without pre-exposure to γ rays; by day 17, however, the decrease was attenuated by the priming dose. Proton dose-dependent decreases, either with or without pre-exposure to γ rays, occurred in white blood cell, lymphocyte and granulocyte counts in blood but not in spleen. A similar pattern was found for lymphocyte subpopulations, including CD3+ T, CD19+ B, CD4+ T, CD8+ T and NK1.1+ natural killer (NK) cells. Spontaneous DNA synthesis by leukocytes after proton irradiation was high in blood on day 4 and high in spleen on day 17; priming with γ radiation attenuated the effect of 3 Gy in both body compartments. Some differences were also noted among groups in erythrocyte and thrombocyte characteristics. Analysis of splenocytes activated with anti-CD3/anti-CD28 antibodies showed changes in T-helper 1 (Th1) and Th2 cytokines. Overall, the data demonstrate that pre-exposure of an intact mammal to low-dose/low-dose-rate γ rays can attenuate the response to acute exposure to proton radiation with respect to at least some cell populations.  相似文献   

5.
Energetic protons are the most abundant particle type in space and can pose serious health risks to astronauts during long-duration missions. The health effects of proton exposure are also a concern for cancer patients undergoing radiation treatment with accelerated protons. To investigate the damage induced by energetic protons in vivo to radiosensitive organs, 6-week-old BALB/c male mice were subjected to 250 MeV proton radiation at whole-body doses of 0.1, 1, and 2 Gy. The gastrointestinal (GI) tract of each exposed animal was dissected 4 h post-irradiation, and the isolated small intestinal tissue was analyzed for histopathological and gene expression changes. Histopathologic observation of the tissue using standard hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining methods to screen for morphologic changes showed a marked increase in apoptotic lesions for even the lowest dose of 0.1 Gy, similar to X- or γ rays. The percentage of apoptotic cells increased dose-dependently, but the dose response appeared supralinear, indicating hypersensitivity at low doses. A significant decrease in surviving crypts and mucosal surface area, as well as in cell proliferation, was also observed in irradiated mice. Gene expression analysis of 84 genes involved in the apoptotic process showed that most of the genes affected by protons were common between the low (0.1 Gy) and high (1 and 2 Gy) doses. However, the genes that were distinctively responsive to the low or high doses suggest that high doses of protons may cause apoptosis in the small intestine by direct damage to the DNA, whereas low doses of protons may trigger apoptosis through a different stress response mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
Radiation affects several cellular and molecular processes, including double strand breakage and modifications of sugar moieties and bases. In outer space, protons are the primary radiation source that poses a range of potential health risks to astronauts. On the other hand, the use of proton irradiation for tumor radiation therapy is increasing, as it largely spares healthy tissues while killing tumor tissues. Although radiation-related research has been conducted extensively, the molecular toxicology and cellular mechanisms affected by proton irradiation remain poorly understood. Therefore, in this study, we irradiated rat lung epithelial cells with different doses of protons and investigated their effects on cell proliferation and death. Our data show an inhibition of cell proliferation in proton-irradiated cells with a significant dose-dependent activation and repression of reactive oxygen species and antioxidants glutathione and superoxide dismutase, respectively, compared with control cells. In addition, the activities of apoptosis-related genes such as caspase-3 and -8 were induced in a dose-dependent manner with corresponding increased levels of DNA fragmentation in proton-irradiated cells compared with control cells. Together, our results show that proton irradiation alters oxidant and antioxidant levels in cells to activate the apoptotic pathway for cell death.  相似文献   

7.
The bystander effect describes radiation-like damage in unirradiated cells either in the vicinity of irradiated cells or exposed to medium from irradiated cells. This study aimed to further characterize the poorly understood mitochondrial response to both direct irradiation and bystander factor(s) in human keratinocytes (HPV-G) and Chinese hamster ovarian cells (CHO-K1). Oxygen consumption rates were determined during periods of state 4, state 3 and uncoupled respiration. Mitochondrial mass was determined using MitoTracker FM. CHO-K1 cells showed significantly reduced oxygen consumption rates 4 h after exposure to 5 Gy direct radiation and irradiated cell conditioned medium (ICCM) and an apparent recovery 12-24 h later. The apparent recovery was likely due to the substantial increase in mitochondrial mass observed in these cells as soon as 4 h after exposure. HPV-G cells, on the other hand, showed a sustained increase in oxygen consumption rates after ICCM exposure and a transient increase 4 h after exposure to 5 Gy direct radiation. A significant increase in mitochondrial mass per HPV-G cell was observed after exposure to both direct radiation and ICCM. These findings are indicative of a stress response to mitochondrial dysfunction that increases the number of mitochondria per cell.  相似文献   

8.
Measurements were made of clonogenic cell survival in rat rhabdomyosarcoma tumors as a function of time following in situ irradiation with single or fractionated doses of 225-kVp X rays or with 557-MeV/u neon ions in the distal position of a 4-cm extended-peak ionization region. Single doses of 20 Gy of X rays or 7 Gy of peak neon ions reduced the initial surviving fraction to approximately 0.025 for each modality. Daily fractionated doses (four fractions in 3 days) of either peak neon ions (1.75 Gy per fraction) or X rays (6 Gy per fraction) achieved a cell survival of approximately 0.02-0.03 after the fourth dose of radiation. In the single-dose experiments, significant 5- and 10-fold decreases in the fraction of clonogenic cells were observed between the third and fourth days after irradiation with peak neon ions and X rays, respectively. After the sixth day postirradiation, the residual clonogenic cells exhibited a rapid burst of proliferation leading to doubling times for the surviving cell fractions of approximately 1.5 days. Radiation-induced growth delay was consistent with the cellular repopulation dynamics. In the fractionated-dose experiments with both radiation modalities, a large delayed decrease in cell survival was observed at 1-3 days after completion of the fractionated-dose schedule. Cellular repopulation was consistent with postirradiation tumor volume regression and regrowth for both radiation modalities. The extent of decrease in survival following the four-fraction radiation schedule was approximately two times greater in X-irradiated than in neon-ion-irradiated tumors that produced the same survival level immediately after the fourth dose. Mechanisms underlying the marked reduction in cell survival 3-4 days postirradiation are discussed, including the possible role of a toxic host cell response against the irradiated tumor cells.  相似文献   

9.
MacPhail, S. H. and Olive, P. L. RPA Foci are Associated with Cell Death after Irradiation. Radiat. Res. 155, 672-679 (2001). Complexes containing replication protein A (RPA) were observed in human TK6 and WIL-2NS lymphoblast cells and SiHa cervical carcinoma cells exposed to 250 kV X rays. Image analysis of individual cells with fluorescence-tagged anti-RPA antibodies was used to measure numbers of discrete foci per cell. RPA foci formed in S-phase cells in response to radiation doses as low as 0.5 Gy, and the number of foci/nucleus was linearly related to dose up to 50 Gy. The maximum number of cells with foci occurred 4-8 h after exposure to 4 Gy, and subsequently declined. However, the number of RPA foci per nucleus (in those cells with foci) reached a maximum after 2-4 h. Apoptotic nuclei from irradiated TK6 and WIL-2NS cells initially contained foci, but these were lost as degradation continued. Radiation-induced micronuclei in SiHa cells were greatly enriched for RPA foci, and cells with nuclei without foci often contained micronuclei with multiple RPA foci. In SiHa cells examined up to 7 days after 4 Gy, RPA foci reappeared in one or more cells in up to 90% of the surviving colonies, and some cells contained 150 or more distinct foci. Reappearance of these complexes could be indicative of radiation-induced genomic instability. These results are consistent with the idea that RPA foci observed several hours after irradiation represent irreparable lesions and as such might be useful in identifying radiosensitive cells.  相似文献   

10.
The biophysical radiation track simulation model PARTRAC was improved by implementing new interaction cross sections for protons in water. Computer-simulated tracks of energy deposition events from protons and their secondary electrons were superimposed on a higher-order DNA target model describing the spatial coordinates of the whole genome inside a human cell. Induction of DNA double-strand breaks was simulated for proton irradiation with LET values between 1.6 and 70 keV/microm and various reference radiation qualities. The yield of DSBs after proton irradiation was found to rise continuously with increasing LET up to about 20 DSBs per Gbp and Gy, corresponding to an RBE up to 2.2. About half of this increase resulted from a higher yield of DSB clusters associated with small fragments below 10 kbp. Exclusion of experimentally unresolved multiple DSBs reduced the maximum DSB yield by 30% and shifted it to an LET of about 40 keV/microm. Simulated fragment size distributions deviated significantly from random breakage distributions over the whole size range after irradiation with protons with an LET above 10 keV/microm. Determination of DSB yields using equations derived for random breakage resulted in an underestimation by up to 20%. The inclusion of background fragments had only a minor influence on the distribution of the DNA fragments induced by radiation. Despite limited numerical agreement, the simulations reproduced the trends in proton-induced DNA DSBs and fragment induction found in recent experiments.  相似文献   

11.
Experiments were conducted to determine (1) whether glucocorticoids directly protected endothelial cells (EC) from radiation and (2) if angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity, known to be increased by glucocorticoid, played a role in the EC response to radiation. Confluent monolayers of EC cultured from bovine aorta EC were treated with dexamethasone (10(-6) M); after irradiation (5.0 Gy, 60Co gamma), ACE and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activities, DNA and protein contents, and nuclei number were measured. Twenty-four hours after 5 Gy, there was increased cell loss (-40%, P less than 0.001), greater LDH release (greater than 100%, P less than 0.001), more LDH activity per cell (+40%, P less than 0.001), and unchanged ACE activity compared to sham-irradiated control EC. However, 48 hr after 5 Gy, ACE activity per cell was decreased (-24%, P less than 0.005). A 48-hr exposure to dexamethasone alone was accompanied by a slight cell loss (-10%, P less than 0.001) and increased cellular ACE activity (+40-140%, P less than 0.001), but a 24-hr dexamethasone exposure was not cytotoxic and did not change ACE activity. Dexamethasone exposure for 48 hr before and after irradiation did not attenuate cell loss or LDH release. However, combined dexamethasone treatment and radiation increased cellular ACE activity at a time when neither agent alone had an effect (24-hr dexamethasone exposure before 5 Gy and assayed 24 hr after 5 Gy). This interaction between radiation and dexamethasone treatment suggests that the glucocorticoid modifies the cell's response to injury. Although this interaction does not ameliorate radiation cytotoxicity, maintenance of ACE levels in injured vessels by hormones may have physiological significance in the hemodynamics of irradiated tissues.  相似文献   

12.
Peripheral blood lymphocytes were irradiated in vitro with (213)Bi alpha particles at doses of 0, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 mGy. Chromosome analysis was performed on 47-h cultures using single-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to paint chromosomes 1, 3 and 5. The whole genome was analyzed for unstable aberrations to derive aberration frequencies and determine cell stability. The dose response for dicentrics was 33.60 +/- 0.47 x 10(-2) per Gy. A more detailed analysis revealed that the majority of aberrations scored as dicentrics were part of complex/multiple aberrations, with the proportion of cells containing complexes increasing with dose. Cells containing aberrations involving painted chromosomes (FISH aberrations) were further classified according to cell stability and complexity. The majority of cells with FISH aberrations were unstable. The proportion of aberrant FISH cells with complex/multiple aberrations ranged from 56% at 10 mGy to 89% at 500 mGy. A linear dose response for genomic frequencies of translocations in stable cells fitted the data from 0 to 200 mGy with a dose response of 7.90 +/- 0.98 x 10(-2) per Gy, thus indicating that they are likely to be observed in peripheral blood lymphocytes from individuals with past or chronic exposure to high-LET radiation. Comparisons with the dose response for low-LET radiation suggest an RBE of 13.6 for dicentrics in all cells and 3.2 for translocations in stable cells. Since stochastic effects of radiation are attributable to genetic changes in viable cells, translocations in stable cells may be a better measure when considering the comparative risks of different qualities of radiation.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of dimethylformamide (DMF) on the radiation response of low- and high-passage intestinal epithelial cells (IEC-17) were examined. The IEC-17 cell line, a rat intestinal epithelial cell line, exhibited a bimodal response to X radiation. The sensitive fraction, which was attributed to a stem cell-like component, had a D0 of 0.90 Gy. The resistant fraction, thought to be the expression of a more mature component, exhibited a D0 of 2.00 Gy. Treatment using a putative cell differentiating agent, N,N-dimethylformamide, increased the resistant fraction of the population from 35 to 80%, suggesting that DMF treatment (100 mM) increased the proportion of mature cells in the IEC-17 cell population. In addition, extended age in culture (greater than 100 passages) resulted in altered morphology, decreased doubling time, increased chromosome number, and loss of anchorage dependence, all features characterizing spontaneously transformed high-passage IEC-17 cells. These high-passage cells also exhibited a bimodal response to X radiation; the sensitive fraction had a D0 of 0.80 Gy while the resistant fraction D0 was 1.50 Gy. DMF increased the resistant fraction from 35 to 55% of the population. Results suggested that the different radiosensitivities of the subpopulations remained throughout the spontaneous transformation of high-passage IEC-17 cells.  相似文献   

14.
Ionizing radiation damage to DNA: molecular aspects   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Radioresistant tumor cells are found in tumor specimens from patients in whom radiotherapy has failed or whose tumors have recurred after therapy. This suggests that inherent cellular radioresistance may in part underlie the failure of radiotherapy, and therefore determination of the presence of resistant cells within a tumor might be a useful predictor of response to radiation therapy. Most standard clonogenic assays of radiation response are time-consuming, and alternative assays of radiation response are being sought. In an earlier publication (J. L. Schwartz et al., Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 15, 907-912, 1988), we reported that radioresistant human tumor cells rejoin DNA double-strand breaks, as measured by DNA neutral filter elution (pH 9.6), faster than more sensitive cell lines. To determine whether DNA elution might have potential as a rapid predictive assay, we examined the relationship between the rate of DNA double-strand break rejoining and radiosensitivity in nine first-passage-after-explant squamous cell carcinomas under conditions that minimized the influence of nontumor and nonclonogenic cells. The frequency of DNA double-strand breaks measured 1 h after irradiation with 100 Gy 60Co gamma rays was used as an estimate of relative rejoining rate. This number is a reflection of both the initial DNA double-strand break frequency and the amount of repair that occurs in 1 h. The relative break frequency was compared to radiosensitivity as measured by standard clonogenic survival assays in later passages (p3-p14) of these same cells. A significant relationship (r = 0.61, P less than 0.01) was found between break frequency measured in first-passage cells and radiosensitivity measured in later passages, suggesting that the neutral elution assay as described here has some promise as a relatively rapid assay of the radiosensitivity of human tumor cells.  相似文献   

15.
We have investigated the effect of gamma-radiation on the frequency of bone marrow micronucleated erythrocytes in seven inbred strains of adult male mice. Twenty animals of each strain viz. Swiss, C57BL/6, C57BR/cd, C3H, CBA, DBA, and AKR were irradiated at 0.0, 0.125, 0.25, 0.50, and 1.00Gy of gamma-rays at a dose rate of 0.46Gy/min using a 60Co-teletharapy machine. Animals were sacrificed 24h post-irradiation, bone marrow smears were made and stained in May-Grunwald Giemsa for evaluating the frequency of micronucleated erythrocytes as indicators of chromosomal damage. About 2000 polychromatic erythrocytes (PCEs) and the corresponding normochromatic erythrocytes (NCEs) were scored for each mouse. Thus, at least 8000 PCEs were scored for each dose point in all the groups. The spontaneous frequency of mn-PCEs per thousand (per thousand ) cells varied considerably among the strains with C57BR/cd (3.47 per thousand ) exhibiting highest as compared to CBA (2.47 per thousand ) and DBA (2.35 per thousand). Radiation exposure, even at lowest dose of 0.125Gy, induced a significant increase in the frequency of mn-PCEs and a dose dependent response was observed among all the strains. However, the animals irradiated at lower doses (0.125-0.50Gy) showed marked differences in the extent of radiation induced chromosomal damage among the various genotypes. At highest dose of radiation (1.00Gy), genotype dependent variability in the frequency of mn-PCEs was not so marked but relatively comparable among the various strains. This study clearly shows that the magnitude of variability of radiation induced chromosomal damage among different strains of mouse can be different at different doses. Therefore, use of single dose point comparisons and/or use of only higher doses of radiation for ascertainment of genotype dependent variability in mouse may lead to erroneous conclusions.  相似文献   

16.
Solar particle events (SPEs) present a major radiation-related risk for manned exploratory missions in deep space. Within a short period the astronauts may absorb doses that engender acute effects, in addition to the risk of late effects, such as the induction of cancer. Using primary human cells, we studied clonogenic survival and the induction of neoplastic transformation after exposure to a worst case scenario SPE. We simulated such an SPE with monoenergetic protons (50, 100, 1000 MeV) delivered at a dose rate of 1.65 cGy min?1 in a dose range from 0 to 3 Gy. For comparison, we exposed the cells to a high dose rate of 33.3 cGy min?1. X rays (100 kVp, 8 mA, 1.7 mm Al filter) were used as a reference radiation. Overall, we observed a significant sparing effect of the SPE dose rate on cell survival. High-dose-rate protons were also more efficient in induction of transformation in the dose range below 30 cGy. However, as dose accumulated at high dose rate, the transformation levels declined, while at the SPE dose rate, the number of transformants continued to increase up to about 1 Gy. These findings suggest that considering dose-rate effects may be important in evaluating the biological effects of exposure to space radiation. Our analyses of the data based on particle fluence showed that lethality and transforming potential per particle clearly increased with increasing linear energy transfer (LET) and thus with the decreasing energy of protons. Further, we found that the biological response was determined not only by LET but also type of radiation, e.g. particles and photons. This suggests that using γ or X rays may not be ideal for assessing risk associated with SPE exposures.  相似文献   

17.
为探明人乳头状瘤病毒(HPV)和促癌剂对食管上皮致癌作用,人胚食管上皮细胞转染HPV协同60钴(60Co)放射观察其恶性转化.用HPV18E6E7AAV转染的人胚食管上皮(SHEE),培养至13代,分为4组,实验组分别用60Co2、4、8Gy照射,每周1次共4周;SHEE未经照射为对照组.细胞形态用相差显微镜观察;细胞DNA合成和定量用3H-TdR掺入和用流式细胞仪分析;染色体众数用常规方法分析;致瘤性用软琼脂培养和裸小鼠接种;HPVDNA用PCR检测.经60Co照射后细胞呈凋亡和坏死(危象期).8周后SHEE 4Gy组细胞增殖,增殖指数(34%)和3H-TdR摄入增高,软琼脂培养和裸鼠接种出现致瘤性.对照组SHEE组细胞增殖指数24%,伴有少数3H-TdR掺入,裸鼠未成瘤.染色体众数:对照组,58~62;4Gy组,63~65;两组HPV18E6E7 PCR呈阳性条带.此结果表明,用HPV18E6E7协同60Coγ射线可以使人胚食管上皮恶性转化,60Co γ射线有加速食管上皮细胞恶性转化作用.  相似文献   

18.
The radiation environment in space is complex in terms of both the variety of charged particles and their dose rates. Simulation of such an environment for experimental studies is technically very difficult. However, with the variety of beams available at the National Space Research Laboratory (NSRL) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) it is possible to ask questions about potential interactions of these radiations. In this study, the end point examined was transformation in vitro from a preneoplastic to a neoplastic phenotype. The effects of 1?GeV/n iron ions and 1?GeV/n protons alone provided strong evidence for suppression of transformation at doses ≤5?cGy. These ions were also studied in combination in so-called mixed-beam experiments. The specific protocols were a low dose (10?cGy) of protons followed after either 5-15?min (immediate) or 16-24?h (delayed) by 1?Gy of iron ions and a low dose (10?cGy) of iron ions followed after either 5-15?min or 16-24?h by 1?Gy of protons. Within experimental error the results indicated an additive interaction under all conditions with no evidence of an adaptive response, with the one possible exception of 10?cGy iron ions followed immediately by 1?Gy protons. A similar challenge dose protocol was also used in single-beam studies to test for adaptive responses induced by 232?MeV/n protons and (137)Cs γ radiation and, contrary to expectations, none were observed. However, subsequent tests of 10?cGy of (137)Cs γ radiation followed after either 5-15?min or 8?h by 1?Gy of (137)Cs γ radiation did demonstrate an adaptive response at 8?h, pointing out the importance of the interval between adapting and challenge dose. Furthermore, the dose-response data for each ion alone indicate that the initial adapting dose of 10?cGy used in the mixed-beam setting may have been too high to see any potential adaptive response.  相似文献   

19.
Chinese hamster ovary cells grown in vitro were treated with bleomycin or irradiated with high doses of 60Co gamma rays (200 and 400 Gy). DNA strand breaks in single cells were analysed by using our newly introduced microelectrophoretic technique. Bleomycin seems to act in a selective manner so that in some cells the DNA is heavily degraded while in others there is only moderate or no measurable damage. In contrast, a uniform response was found after gamma irradiation. To achieve the same magnitude of DNA fragmentation as in the most severely bleomycin-damaged cells, irradiation with more than 200 Gy is required. Some 8000 double-strand breaks per cell are produced by 200 Gy which will convert the molecular weight of the DNA to the range of 10(8)-10(9) dalton, and free migration of DNA fragments occurs during electrophoresis. We include also a detailed study of the DNA migration pattern following doses of 0-100 Gy gamma rays.  相似文献   

20.
The space radiation environment consists of trapped particle radiation, solar particle radiation, and galactic cosmic radiation (GCR), in which protons are the most abundant particle type. During missions to the moon or to Mars, the constant exposure to GCR and occasional exposure to particles emitted from solar particle events (SPE) are major health concerns for astronauts. Therefore, in order to determine health risks during space missions, an understanding of cellular responses to proton exposure is of primary importance. The expression of DNA repair genes in response to ionizing radiation (X-rays and gamma rays) has been studied, but data on DNA repair in response to protons is lacking. Using qPCR analysis, we investigated changes in gene expression induced by positively charged particles (protons) in four categories (0, 0.1, 1.0, and 2.0 Gy) in nine different DNA repair genes isolated from the testes of irradiated mice. DNA repair genes were selected on the basis of their known functions. These genes include ERCC1 (5' incision subunit, DNA strand break repair), ERCC2/NER (opening DNA around the damage, Nucleotide Excision Repair), XRCC1 (5' incision subunit, DNA strand break repair), XRCC3 (DNA break and cross-link repair), XPA (binds damaged DNA in preincision complex), XPC (damage recognition), ATA or ATM (activates checkpoint signaling upon double strand breaks), MLH1 (post-replicative DNA mismatch repair), and PARP1 (base excision repair). Our results demonstrate that ERCC1, PARP1, and XPA genes showed no change at 0.1 Gy radiation, up-regulation at 1.0 Gy radiation (1.09 fold, 7.32 fold, 0.75 fold, respectively), and a remarkable increase in gene expression at 2.0 Gy radiation (4.83 fold, 57.58 fold and 87.58 fold, respectively). Expression of other genes, including ATM and XRCC3, was unchanged at 0.1 and 1.0 Gy radiation but showed up-regulation at 2.0 Gy radiation (2.64 fold and 2.86 fold, respectively). We were unable to detect gene expression for the remaining four genes (XPC, ERCC2, XRCC1, and MLH1) in either the experimental or control animals.  相似文献   

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