首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Genetic effects of ionizing radiation in the progeny of exposed parents could be conventionally subdivided on three main types. 1. Severe developmental disorders (fetus death, stillbirth, early postnatal mortality, malformation, hereditary disease, sterility). These effects are known to be caused by so called "gross" mutations (genomic, chromosomal, those of essential genes) with dominant harmful effects. Although found in rodents, insects, fishes they have not been found in humans. The proposal is made that the higher reproductive potency of a species the higher its tolerance for defective organisms. Due to strong selection against severe defects at the earliest stage of pregnancy, this genetic effect of radiation is likely to be difficult to detect in people. 2. Increased cancer risk manifested as elevated incidence of spontaneous tumors and increased sensitivity to carcinogenic agents. 3. Decreased fitness (non-carcinogenic negative health effects). These two last types of radiation genetic effects are presumably due to instability and functional inferiority of cell genome in the progeny of irradiated parents. The genetic background of these effects is suggested to be the load of induced minor mutations in regulatory genes (mini-, microsatelite loci) or/and epigenomic rearrangements of DNA in parental germ cells transmitted to progeny. These radiation genetic effects are much more obvious in animals as compared to humans. Apparently, they are difficult to find in humans because of their essential dependence on promotive (life style) factors, which are impossible to control in the offspring of irradiated people. A comparison of somatic (in irradiated organisms) and genetic (in the progeny of irradiated parents) effects of radiation provide evidence on the phenomenological as well as pathogenic similarity.  相似文献   

2.
Morgan WF 《Radiation research》2003,159(5):581-596
The goal of this review is to summarize the evidence for non-targeted and delayed effects of exposure to ionizing radiation in vivo. Currently, human health risks associated with radiation exposures are based primarily on the assumption that the detrimental effects of radiation occur in irradiated cells. Over the years a number of non-targeted effects of radiation exposure in vivo have been described that challenge this concept. These include radiation-induced genomic instability, bystander effects, clastogenic factors produced in plasma from irradiated individuals that can cause chromosomal damage when cultured with nonirradiated cells, and transgenerational effects of parental irradiation that can manifest in the progeny. These effects pose new challenges to evaluating the risk(s) associated with radiation exposure and understanding radiation-induced carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
Experiments performed in laboratory animals suggest that ionizing radiation can induce DNA damage in the germ cells of exposed individuals and lead to various deleterious effects in their progeny, including miscarriage, low birth weight, congenital abnormalities and perhaps cancer. However, no clear evidence for such effects has been found in epidemiological studies of people exposed to radiation. The predicted risks of hereditary effects of any kinds resulting from parental exposure to relatively low doses of ionizing radiation remain very low, compared to the spontaneous risks in the absence of irradiation. Irradiation of the mouse embryo can lead to various effects (lethality, growth retardation, congenital abnormalities), depending on the period of gestation at which irradiation occurs. In humans, prenatal irradiation has only been exceptionally associated with congenital abnormalities, but irradiation between weeks 8-25 has been shown to be able to induce severe mental retardation. Although being not proven, the risk of developing a childhood cancer following prenatal irradiation may also not be excluded. Like for genetic effects, the risk of adverse effects following exposure of the embryo to relatively low doses remains quite low compared to the natural risks.  相似文献   

4.
An increased risk of carcinogenesis caused by exposure to space radiation during prolonged space travel is a limiting factor for human space exploration. Typically, astronauts are exposed to low fluences of ionizing particles that target only a few cells in a tissue at any one time. The propagation of stressful effects from irradiated to neighboring bystander cells and their transmission to progeny cells would be of importance in estimates of the health risks of exposure to space radiation. With relevance to the risk of carcinogenesis, we investigated, in model C3H 10T½ mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs), modulation of the spontaneous frequency of neoplastic transformation in the progeny of bystander MEFs that had been in co-culture 10 population doublings earlier with MEFs exposed to moderate doses of densely ionizing iron ions (1 GeV/nucleon) or sparsely ionizing protons (1 GeV). An increase (P<0.05) in neoplastic transformation frequency, likely mediated by intercellular communication through gap junctions, was observed in the progeny of bystander cells that had been in co-culture with cells irradiated with iron ions, but not with protons.  相似文献   

5.
Stability of genome is one of the evolutionary important trait of cells. Various mutations (gene, chromosomal, genomic) as well as artificial manipulations with genomes (inbreeding, DNA transfection, introduction of Br-DU in DNA) cause the genetic instability. Ionizing radiation is known as the factor which induced instability of genome in late mitotic descendants of cells after in vitro and in vivo exposure. Radiation induced genetic instability can be transmitted through germline cells. On the cell level both types of radiation induced genomic instability are manifested in elevated frequency of mutations, chromosome aberrations, micronuclei, increased radiosensitivity, disappearance of adaptive response, changes in gene expression. In studies of 1970-1980 years clear evidences on the different morphological and functional injuries in tissues of irradiated organisms as well as in tissues of the progeny of exposed parents were obtained. On the organism level the instability of mitotic and of meiotic progeny of irradiated cells is resulted in increased risk of cancer and of other somatic diseases. It seems to be useful to review the earlier radiobiology literature where delayed and transgenerational effects of ionizing radiation on tissues and on organisms level were clearly shown in animals. For the estimation of pathogenic role of radiation induced genomic instability in humans, particularly in children of exposed parents the parallel study of the same human cohorts using clinical parameters and various characteristic of genomic instability seems to be very important.  相似文献   

6.
Exposure to ionizing radiation may induce a heritable genomic instability phenotype that results in a persisting and enhanced genetic and functional change among the progeny of irradiated cells. Since radiation-induced bystander effects have been demonstrated with a variety of biological end points under both in vitro and in vivo conditions, this raises the question whether cytoplasmic irradiation or the radiation-induced bystander effect can also lead to delayed genomic instability. In the present study, we used the Radiological Research Accelerator Facility charged-particle microbeam for precise nuclear or cytoplasmic irradiation. The progeny of irradiated and the bystander human hamster hybrid (A(L)) cells were analyzed using multicolor banding (mBAND) to examine persistent chromosomal changes. Our results showed that the numbers of metaphase cells involving changes of human chromosome 11 (including rearrangement, deletion and duplication) were significantly higher than that of the control in the progeny of both nuclear and cytoplasmic targeted cells. These chromosomal changes could also be detected among the progeny of bystander cells. mBAND analyses of clonal isolates from nuclear and cytoplasm irradiations as well as the bystander cell group showed that chromosomal unstable clones were generated. Analyses of clonal stability after long-term culture indicated no significant change in the number of unstable clones for the duration of culture in each irradiated group. These results suggest that genomic instability that is manifested after ionizing radiation exposure is not dependent on direct damage to the cell nucleus.  相似文献   

7.
Exposure to ionizing radiation can result in delayed effects that can be detected in the progeny of an irradiated cell multiple generations after the initial exposure. These effects are described under the rubric of radiation-induced genomic instability and encompass multiple genotoxic endpoints. We have developed a green fluorescence protein (GFP)-based assay and demonstrated that ionizing radiation induces genomic instability in human RKO-derived cells and in human hamster hybrid GM10115 cells, manifested as increased homologous recombination (HR). Up to 10% of cells cultured after irradiation produce mixed GFP(+/-) colonies indicative of delayed HR or, in the case of RKO-derived cells, mutation and deletion. Consistent with prior studies, delayed chromosomal instability correlated with delayed reproductive cell death. In contrast, cells displaying delayed HR showed no evidence of delayed reproductive cell death, and there was no correlation between delayed chromosomal instability and delayed HR, indicating that these forms of genome instability arise by distinct mechanisms. Because delayed hyperrecombination can be induced at doses of ionizing radiation that are not associated with significantly reduced cell viability, these data may have important implications for assessment of radiation risk and understanding the mechanisms of radiation carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
Radiation induced genomic instability can be described as the increased rate of genomic alterations occurring in the progeny of an irradiated cell. Its manifestations are the dynamic ongoing production of chromosomal rearrangements, mutations, gene amplifications, transformation, microsatellite instability, and/or cell killing. In this prospectus, we present the hypothesis that cellular exposure to ionizing radiation can result in the secretion of soluble factors by irradiated cells and/or their progeny, and that these factors can elicit responses in other cells thereby initiating and perpetuating ongoing genomic instability.  相似文献   

9.
Multiple genetic changes are required for the development of a malignant cell. The frequency of such changes in cancer cells is higher than can be explained through random mutation, and it was proposed that a subpopulation of cells develop a persistent mutator phenotype. Evidence for such a phenotype has been observed in mammalian cells after treatment with ionizing radiation. The mechanism that promotes this effect has not been defined, but proposed explanations include increased levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in irradiated cells and their progeny. The tumor suppressor TP53 is of prime importance in coordinating the cellular response to damage, and it has been suggested to have a role in regulating the cellular redox state. We investigated the persistence of induced levels of ROS in normal diploid human cells for 1 month after X-ray exposure and the role of TP53 in this oxidant response. X radiation induced an oxidant response that persisted for 2 weeks after exposure in cells with normal TP53 function. ROS levels in cells with abrogated TP53 function were decreased in magnitude and duration. X radiation caused a primary transient induction of TP53 followed by a reinduction of TP53 5 days after irradiation. This reinduction persisted for at least 2 days and coincided with the largest induction of apoptosis. The persistently elevated levels of ROS and delayed reinduction of TP53 reported here are further evidence of the delayed effects of ionizing radiation and add to the growing number of such observations.  相似文献   

10.
Four children groups with and without thyroid pathology born to fathers exposed to ionizing irradiation in 1986 during Chernobyl accident as liquidators as well as residents of territory with radioactive contamination have been cytogenetically observed. The frequency and spectrum of chromosome aberrations in peripheral blood lymphocytes have been studied using two-termed cultivation (during 48 and 144 hours). Under the short-term incubation the observed groups did not significantly differ on the mean-group integral cytogenetic parameters which corresponded to age norm, but in progeny of parents from radionuclide contaminated territory the increased level of chromosome type exchanges has been revealed. In long-termed lymphocyte cultures of children with chronic thyroiditis the significantly increased cytogenetic effects of both chromatid (single fragments) and chromosome types (abnormal monocentrics, centric rings) have been established. The data received testified the reality of the transmissible chromosome instability phenomenon in progeny of irradiated parents and confirmed the possibility of its expression in consequent mitoses.  相似文献   

11.
Over the past 20 years there has been increasing evidence that cells and the progeny of cells surviving a very low dose of ionizing radiation [micro-mGy] can exhibit a wide range of non-monotonic effects such as adaptive responses, low dose hypersensitivity and other delayed effects. These effects are inconsistent with the expected dose-response, when based on extrapolation of high dose data and cast doubt on the reliability of extrapolating from high dose data to predict low dose effects. Recently the cause of many of these effects has been tentatively ascribed to so-called "bystander effects". These are effects that occur in cells not directly hit by an ionizing track but which are influenced by signals from irradiated cells and are thus highly relevant in situations where the dose is very low. Not all bystander effects may be deleterious although most endpoints measured involve cell damage or death. In this commentary, we consider how these effects impact the historical central dogma of radiobiology and radiation protection, which is that DNA double strand breaks are the primary radiation-induced lesion which can be quantifiably related to received dose and which determine the probability that a cancer will result from a radiation exposure. We explore the low dose issues and the evidence and conclude that in the very low dose region, the primary determinant of radiation exposure outcome is the genetic and epigenetic background of the individual and not solely the dose. What this does is to dissociate dose from effect as a quantitative relationship, but it does not necessarily mean that the effect is ultimately unrelated to DNA damage. The fundamental thesis we present is that at low doses fundamentally different mechanisms underlie radiation action and that at these doses, effect is not quantitatively related to dose.  相似文献   

12.
The traditional thinking has been that the biological effects of ionizing radiation occur in irradiated cells as a consequence of the DNA damage they incur. This implies that: 1) biological effects occur only in irratiated cells, 2) radiation traversal through the nucleus of the cell is a prerequisite to produce a biological response, and 3) DNA is the target molecule in the cell. Evidence has been emerging, however, for non-DNA targeted effects of radiation; that is, effects including mutations, chromosomal aberrations, and changes in gene expression which occur in cells that in themselves receive no radiation exposure. Two of these phenomena will be described in this paper. The first is radiation-induced genomic instability whereby biological effects, including elevated frequencies of mutations and chromosomal aberrations, arise in the distant descendants of irradiated cells. The second phenomenon has been termed the "bystander effect", whereby in a mixed population of irradiated and nonirradiated cells, biological effects arise in those cells that receive no radiation exposure. The damage signals are transmitted from cell to cell through gap junction channels, and the genetic effects observed in bystander cells appear to result from an upregulation of oxidative stress. The possible influence of these non-targeted effects of radiation of the respounse to low-dose exposures is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
We have demonstrated for the first time that a single exposure to γ-radiation at a dose of 3 cGy on HELF-104 human embryonic lung fibroblasts in early passages leads to the delayed stimulation of proliferation of the progeny of irradiated cells by 30–37 days. Moreover, the general changes in dynamics of proliferation after irradiation with low doses (3 and 5 cGy) are more pronounced than after high-dose irradiation (2 Gy). We suggest that this effect may play an important role in the formation of the specific effects of low doses of ionizing radiation, as detected by integral endpoints at higher levels of organization of living matter.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of ionizing radiation on osteoblast-like cells in vitro   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The well-described detrimental effects of ionizing radiation on the regeneration of bone within a fracture site include decreased osteocyte number, suppressed osteoblast activity, and diminished vascularity. However, the biologic mechanisms underlying osteoradionecrosis and the impaired fracture healing of irradiated bone remain undefined. Ionizing radiation may decrease successful osseous repair by altering cytokine expression profiles resulting from or leading to a change in the osteoblastic differentiation state. These changes may, in turn, cause alterations in osteoblast proliferation and extracellular matrix formation. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of ionizing radiation on the proliferation, maturation, and cytokine production of MC3T3-E1 osteoblast-like cells in vitro. Specifically, the authors examined the effects of varying doses of ionizing radiation (0, 40, 400, and 800 cGy) on the expression of transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and alkaline phosphatase. In addition, the authors studied the effects of ionizing radiation on MC3T3-E1 cellular proliferation and the ability of conditioned media obtained from control and irradiated cells to regulate the proliferation of bovine aortic endothelial cells. Finally, the authors evaluated the effects of adenovirus-mediated TGF-beta1 gene therapy in an effort to "rescue" irradiated osteoblasts. The exposure of osteoblast-like cells to ionizing radiation resulted in dose-dependent decreases in cellular proliferation and promoted cellular differentiation (i.e., increased alkaline phosphatase production). Additionally, ionizing radiation caused dose-dependent decreases in total TGF-beta1 and VEGF protein production. Decreases in total TGF-beta1 production were due to a decrease in TGF-beta1 production per cell. In contrast, decreased total VEGF production was secondary to decreases in cellular proliferation, because the cellular production of VEGF by irradiated osteoblasts was moderately increased when VEGF production was corrected for cell number. Additionally, in contrast to control cells (i.e., nonirradiated), conditioned media obtained from irradiated osteoblasts failed to stimulate the proliferation of bovine aortic endothelial cells. Finally, transfection of control and irradiated cells with a replication-deficient TGF-beta1 adenovirus before irradiation resulted in an increase in cellular production of TGF-beta1 protein and VEGF. Interestingly, this intervention did not alter the effects of irradiation on cellular proliferation, which implies that alterations in TGF-beta1 expression do not underlie the deficiencies noted in cellular proliferation. The authors hypothesize that ionizing radiation-induced alterations in the cytokine profiles and differentiation states of osteoblasts may provide insights into the cellular mechanisms underlying osteoradionecrosis and impaired fracture healing.  相似文献   

15.
A long-held dogma in radiation biology has been that the biological effects of exposure to ionizing radiation occur as a result of damage in directly irradiated cells and that no effect would occur in neighboring unirradiated cells. This paradigm has been frequently challenged by reports of radiation effects in unirradiated or 'bystander' cells receiving signals from directly irradiated cells, an issue that may have substantial impact on radiation risk assessment and development of radiation-based therapies. Radiation-induced bystander effects have been shown in single-cell systems in vitro for an array of cancer relevant endpoints, and may trigger damage in more complex 3-D tissue systems. They may be mediated by soluble factors released by irradiated cells into the extracellular environment and/or by the passage of mediator molecules through gap-junction intercellular communication. To date, evidence that radiation-associated bystander or abscopal responses are effectual in vivo has been limited, but new data suggest that they may significantly affect tumor development in susceptible mouse models. Further understanding of how the signal/s is transmitted to unirradiated cells and tissues and how it provokes long-range and significant responses is crucial. By summarizing the existing evidence of radiation induced bystander-like effects in various systems with emphasis on in vivo findings, we will discuss the potential mechanisms involved in these observations and how effects in bystander cells contribute to uncertainties in assessing cancer risks associated with radiation exposure.  相似文献   

16.
Ionizing radiation can induce chromosome instability that is transmitted over many generations after irradiation in the progeny of surviving cells, but it remains unclear why this instability can be transmitted to the progeny. To acquire knowledge about the transmissible nature of genomic instability, we transferred an irradiated human chromosome into unirradiated mouse recipient cells by microcell fusion and examined the stability of the transferred human chromosome in the microcell hybrids. The transferred chromosome was stable in all six microcell hybrids in which an unirradiated human chromosome had been introduced. In contrast, the transferred chromosome was unstable in four out of five microcell hybrids in which an irradiated human chromosome had been introduced. The aberrations included changes in the irradiated chromosome itself and rearrangements with recipient mouse chromosomes. Thus the present study demonstrates that genomic instability can be transmitted to the progeny of unirradiated cells by a chromosome exposed to ionizing radiation, implying that the instability is caused by the irradiated chromosome itself and also that the instability is induced by the nontargeted effect of radiation.  相似文献   

17.
Widespread evidence indicates that exposure of cell populations to ionizing radiation results in significant biological changes in both the irradiated and nonirradiated bystander cells in the population. We investigated the role of radiation quality, or linear energy transfer (LET), and radiation dose in the propagation of stressful effects in the progeny of bystander cells. Confluent normal human cell cultures were exposed to low or high doses of 1GeV/u iron ions (LET ~ 151 keV/μm), 600 MeV/u silicon ions (LET ~ 51 keV/μm), or 1 GeV protons (LET ~ 0.2 keV/μm). Within minutes after irradiation, the cells were trypsinized and co-cultured with nonirradiated cells for 5 h. During this time, irradiated and nonirradiated cells were grown on either side of an insert with 3-μm pores. Nonirradiated cells were then harvested and allowed to grow for 20 generations. Relative to controls, the progeny of bystander cells that were co-cultured with cells irradiated with iron or silicon ions, but not protons, exhibited reduced cloning efficiency and harbored higher levels of chromosomal damage, protein oxidation and lipid peroxidation. This correlated with decreased activity of antioxidant enzymes, inactivation of the redox-sensitive metabolic enzyme aconitase, and altered translation of proteins encoded by mitochondrial DNA. Together, the results demonstrate that the long-term consequences of the induced nontargeted effects greatly depend on the quality and dose of the radiation and involve persistent oxidative stress due to induced perturbations in oxidative metabolism. They are relevant to estimates of health risks from exposures to space radiation and the emergence of second malignancies after radiotherapy.  相似文献   

18.
Male and female Aedes aegypti (L.) mosquitoes of the laboratory strain ROCK were irradiated with 130 mw of argon 514.5 nm laser microbeams for 0.04, 0.25, 0.4, and 0.5 s, respectively. Egg production, percentage hatch, and productivity (average number of adults surviving after 3 wk) were used to assess mutagenic effects. Mortality was high for males in all laser radiation groups and increased with time of exposure. Except for the group treated for 0.25 s, significant reductions in total F1 progeny also were demonstrated for all other experimentals when male parents were exposed to laser radiation. Females showed a high mortality when subjected to 0.4- and 0.5-s laser radiation. No F1 progeny were produced when parental females were exposed for 0.25, 0.4, and 0.5 s. Numbers of F1 progeny from females exposed to 0.04 s of laser radiation were significantly reduced. A comparison of weekly mean number of progeny showed that the important differences in productivity occurred during the first and second week, respectively, when either male or female adult parents were subjected to laser radiation.  相似文献   

19.
The adenylate cyclase and phospholipase A2 incorporation in the functional responses as well as lipid peroxidation processes and glutathione system homeostasis of animal leukocytes to small doses of ionizing radiation (1-100 mGy) have been estimated. The cells were irradiated by introduction of radioactive isotope 14C-leucine into the incubation medium. It is established that the ionizing radiation has different effects on the modification of cellular functions by the agents, which change adenylate cyclase and phospholipase A2 activity. Neutralization of stimulative irradiation effect on chemokinesis of polymorphonuclear leukocytes by quinacrine (the inhibitor of phospholipase A2) indicates for certain, that metabolism of eicosanoids takes immediate part in the cell response to ionizing radiation. Apparently, adenylate cyclase has no influence on this process, where at indicates the lack of influence of forskolin (the stimulator of adenylate cyclase) on the spontaneous motility, and on the radiation action on this leukocyte function. Rosette forming ability of lymphocytes is regulated by both enzymes because it is modified both by the inhibitor of phospholipase A2, and by the adenylate cyclase stimulant. In this case it is impossible to exclude the action of ionizing radiation both through the adenylate cyclase cascade, and through the eicosanoid metabolism. In all the concentration range the radionuclides do not affect the studied biochemical indexes of the cell, but change the action of the modifiers.  相似文献   

20.
Examination of 2563 offsprings of Wistar rats after irradiation of one or both parents with doses of 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 3 and 4 Gy was carried out; the manifestation of lethal effects in the progeny of the first generation in ontogenesis was studied. The level of embryonic death was the highest after irradiation of germ cells of parents at stages of spermatids, spermatozoids and matured oocytes. Following irradiation of both parents with doses of 0.25, 0.5 and 1 Gy at these stages of gametogenesis and 4 Gy at the stage of spermatids and matured oocytes there was a trend of increasing radiation effects caused by the participation of two irradiated germ cells. After irradiation of both parents with doses of 2, 3 and 4 Gy the embryonic death F1 was essentially the same as rates for irradiated females and non-irradiated males. The F1 death rate in early postnatal development exceeded the control only after irradiation with doses of 2, 3 and 4 Gy. The increase in radiation effects in the F1 due to the mating of two irradiated parents appears to be associated with a mechanism demonstrating additivity or synergism.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号