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1.
Both S-2-(3-aminopropylamino) ethylphosphorothioic acid (WR-2721) and 16-16 dimethyl prostaglandin E2 (dm PGE2) protected the intestinal clonogenic cells to some degree from the effects of 137Cs gamma-irradiation. The D0 was increased from 1.1 +/- 0.12 Gy in controls to 1.55 +/- 0.48 Gy in 16-16 dm PGE2 treated and 2.12 +/- 0.20 Gy in WR-2721 treated mice. Both agents also increased the shoulder of the clonogenic-cell survival curve. Studies were done to measure the effects of these two different radioprotectors on radiation-induction of DNA single-strand breaks in cells comprising the murine intestinal mucosa. The number of DNA single-strand breaks increased with increasing doses of gamma-rays in animals killed immediately following exposure. WR-2721 reduced the number of initial radiation-induced DNA single-strand breaks when given one-half hour before exposure; the time of maximum protection. In contrast, 16-16 dm PGE2 given 1 hour before irradiation (the time required to afford maximum protection from radiation cytotoxicity) did not reduce the number of initial DNA breaks. Both agents impeded the rate of rejoining of DNA breaks with increasing time after irradiation. However, the relationship between these effects on the rate of strand rejoining and cell survival is unknown. These results suggest that either both agents are similarly distributed within the cells but the mechanisms of radioprotection are different, or the mechanisms by which these agents protect are similar, but the two agents affect different subcellular targets, the protection of which contributes to increased cell survival.  相似文献   

2.
R Bases  J Maio  F Mendez 《Radiation research》1986,105(2):259-271
Radiation-induced single-strand breaks were found throughout the 172 bp repeat units of African green monkey component alpha DNA. Two kinds of 3'-ends of 5'-32P-labeled restriction fragments were found, as previously described by others. After irradiation in vitro, the yield of single-strand breaks was 4 X 10(-5) breaks/nucleotide/Gy, as determined by analyses in DNA sequencing type gels. Protection from X-ray damage was found when the DNA received 150 Gy in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol. The results demonstrate a very sensitive quantitative means to study the role of indirect effects of ionizing radiation on strand-break induction and protection at the base sequence level. Component alpha DNA was isolated from irradiated CV-1 cells and was analyzed for single-strand breaks. Under these conditions the frequency of breaks was less than the frequency obtained when purified DNA was irradiated. The methodology is presented because of its relevance to the study of DNA strand breakage in living cells.  相似文献   

3.
Ionizing radiation is a potent inducer of DNA damage because it causes single- and double-strand breaks, alkali-labile sites, base damage, and crosslinks. The interest in ionizing radiation is due to its environmental and clinical implications. Single-strand breaks, which are the initial damage induced by a genotoxic agent, can be used as a biomarker of exposure, whereas the more biologically relevant double-strand breaks can be analyzed to quantify the extent of damage. In the present study the effects of 137Cs γ-radiation at doses of 1, 5, and 10 Gray on DNA and subsequent repair by C3H10T1/2 cells (mouse embryo fibroblasts) were investigated. Two versions of the comet assay, a sensitive method for evaluating DNA damage, were implemented: the alkaline one to detect single-strand breaks, and the neutral one to identify double-strand breaks. The results show a good linear relation between DNA damage and radiation dose, for both single-strand and double-strand breaks. A statistically significant difference with respect to controls was found at the lowest dose of 1 Gy. Heterogeneity in DNA damage within the cell population was observed as a function of radiation dose. Repair kinetics showed that most of the damage was repaired within 2 h after irradiation, and that the highest rejoining rate occurred with the highest dose (10 Gy). Single-strand breaks were completely repaired 24 h after irradiation, whereas residual double-strand breaks were still present. This finding needs further investigation. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

4.
The human fibroblasts were gamma-irradiated with low doses (0.07-0.21 Gy). After a short time interval (3 h), a study was made of the postirradiation viability of cells (by the trypan blue dye exclusion method); post-N-methyl-N'-nitro-nitrosoguanidine-DNA synthesis (by 3H-thymidine incorporation immediately after the mutagen treatment) and postirradiation induction of DNA single-strand breaks (by alkaline elution of cells lysed on the membrane filters). The preirradiation of cells with low doses of gamma-rays was shown to render the cells resistance to induction of DNA breaks by the following exposure to gamma-radiation. The survival rate increased; DNA synthesis was resistant to alkylation damage in these cells, as compared to nonirradiated cells.  相似文献   

5.
Human lymphocytes exposed to low doses of ionizing radiation from incorporated tritiated thymidine or from X-rays become less susceptible to the induction of chromatid breaks by high doses of X-rays. This response can be induced by 0.01 Gy (1 rad) of X-rays, and has been attributed to the induction of a repair mechanism that causes the restitution of X-ray-induced chromosome breaks. Because the major lesions responsible for the induction of chromosome breakage are double-strand breaks in DNA, attempts have been made to see if the repair mechanism can affect various types of clastogenic lesions induced in DNA by chemical mutagens and carcinogens. When cells exposed to 0.01 Gy of X-rays or to low doses of tritiated thymidine were subsequently challenged with high doses of tritiated thymidine or bleomycin, which can induce double-strand breaks in DNA, or mitomycin C, which can induce cross-links in DNA, approximately half as many chromatid breaks were induced as expected. When, on the other hand, the cells were challenged with the alkylating agent methyl methanesulfonate (MMS), which can produce single-strand breaks in DNA, approximately twice as much damage was found as was induced by MMS alone. The results indicate that prior exposure to 0.01 Gy of X-rays reduces the number of chromosome breaks induced by double-strand breaks, and perhaps even by cross-links, in DNA, but has the opposite effect on breaks induced by the alkylating agent MMS. The results also show that the induced repair mechanism is different from that observed in the adaptive response that follows exposure to low doses of alkylating agents.  相似文献   

6.
The potency of UVA radiation, representing 90% of solar UV light reaching the earth׳s surface, to induce human skin cancer is the subject of continuing controversy. This study was undertaken to investigate the role of reactive oxygen species in DNA damage produced by the exposure of human cells to UVA radiation. This knowledge is important for better understanding of UV-induced carcinogenesis. We measured DNA single-strand breaks and alkali-labile sites in human lymphocytes exposed ex vivo to various doses of 365-nm UV photons compared to X-rays and hydrogen peroxide using the comet assay. We demonstrated that the UVA-induced DNA damage increased in a linear dose-dependent manner. The rate of DNA single-strand breaks and alkali-labile sites after exposure to 1 J/cm2 was similar to the rate induced by exposure to 1 Gy of X-rays or 25 μM hydrogen peroxide. The presence of either the hydroxyl radical scavenger dimethyl sulfoxide or the singlet oxygen quencher sodium azide resulted in a significant reduction in the UVA-induced DNA damage, suggesting a role for these reactive oxygen species in mediating UVA-induced DNA single-strand breaks and alkali-labile sites. We also showed that chromatin relaxation due to hypertonic conditions resulted in increased damage in both untreated and UVA-treated cells. The effect was the most significant in the presence of 0.5 M Na+, implying a role for histone H1. Our data suggest that the majority of DNA single-strand breaks and alkali-labile sites after exposure of human lymphocytes to UVA are produced by reactive oxygen species (the hydroxyl radical and singlet oxygen) and that the state of chromatin may substantially contribute to the outcome of such exposures.  相似文献   

7.
Summary When an aqueous solution of plasmid DNA at a constant low concentration of 5 µg/cm3 was irradiated with60Co-rays, D37 dose of single-strand breaks was decreased from 18 Gy at a dose-rate of 6.77 Gy/h of acute irradiation to 2.3 Gy at a dose-rate of 0.00212 Gy/h. OrG value was increased from 0.0010 to 0.0081. Similar dose-rate dependency of D37 dose andG value were also found when the plasmid DNA solution was treated with various concentrations of tritiated water at various dose-rates, ranging from 5.13 Gy/h to 0.000118 Gy/h. RBE of tritiumß-rays for single-strand breaks was ranged from 0.3 to 0.5 in a wide range of dose-rates. When the DNA solution was saturated with argon to remove oxygen, the dose-rate dependency of-rays was abolished and that of tritiumß-rays was significantly supressed. When the DNA solution in air was kept at 4° C for 50 h or 25 days after acute irradiation, theG value of DNA breaks was the same as that kept at —20° C for the same period, but much lower than that of the solution irradiated for the same period at a lower dose-rate to give the same total doses. This shows that the inverse dose-rate effect could not be induced from the different exposure periods but from continuous irradiation of different dose-rates. The inverse dose-rate effect for inactivation of transforming activity of DNA irradiated with tritiated water was also observed in the range from 0.0588 Gy/h to 0.00118 Gy/h.  相似文献   

8.
Levels of DNA single-strand break were assayed in brain cells from rats acutely exposed to low-intensity 2450 MHz microwaves using an alkaline microgel electrophoresis method. Immediately after 2 h of exposure to pulsed (2 μs width, 500 pulses/s) microwaves, no significant effect was observed, whereas a dose rate-dependent [0.6 and 1.2 W/kg whole body specific absorption rate (SAR)] increase in DNA single-strand breaks was found in brain cells of rats at 4 h postexposure. Furthermore, in rats exposed for 2 h to continuous-wave 2450 MHz microwaves (SAR 1.2 W/kg), increases in brain cell DNA single-strand breaks were observed immediately as well as at 4 h postexposure. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Skin fibroblasts from Gardner syndrome (GS) compared with those from normal donors showed a significantly higher incidence of chromatid gaps and breaks following exposure to low-intensity, cool-white fluorescent light during G2 phase of the cell cycle. Considerable evidence supports the concept that chromatid gaps and breaks seen directly after exposure to DNA-damaging agents represent unrepaired DNA single- and double-strand breaks respectively. The changes in incidence of chromatid aberrations with time after light exposure are consistent with the sequence of events known to follow DNA damage and repair. Initially, the incidence of light-induced chromatid gaps was equivalent in GS and normal fibroblasts. In the normal cells, the chromatid gaps disappeared by 1 h post-exposure, presumably as a result of efficient repair of DNA single-strand breaks. In contrast, the incidence of gaps increased in GS cells by 0.5 h followed by a decrease at 1 h and concomitant increase in chromatid breaks. It appears from these findings that the increased incidence of chromatid damage in GS fibroblasts results from deficient repair of DNA single-strand breaks which arise from incomplete nucleotide excision of DNA damage during G2 phase.  相似文献   

10.
It has been suggested that DNA strand breaks are the molecular lesions responsible for radiation-induced lethality and that their repair is the basis for the recovery of irradiated cells from sublethal and potentially lethal damage. EM9 is a Chinese hamster ovary cell line that is hypersensitive to killing by X rays and has been reported to have a defect in the rate of rejoining of DNA single-strand breaks. To establish the importance of DNA strand-break repair in cellular recovery from sublethal and potentially lethal X-ray damage, those two parameters, recovery from sublethal and potentially lethal damage, were studied in EM9 cells as well as in EM9's parental repair-proficient strain, AA8. As previously reported, EM9 is the more radiosensitive cell line, having a D0 of 0.98 Gy compared to a D0 of 1.56 Gy for AA8 cells. DNA alkaline elution studies suggest that EM9 cells repair DNA single-strand breaks at a slower rate than AA8 cells. Neutral elution analysis suggests that EM9 cells also repair DNA double-strand breaks more slowly than AA8 cells. All of these data are consistent with the hypothesis that DNA strand-break ligation is defective in EM9 cells and that this defect accounts for increased radiosensitivity. The kinetics and magnitude of recovery from sublethal and potentially lethal damage, however, were similar for both EM9 and AA8 cells. Six-hour recovery ratios for sublethal damage repair were found to be 2.47 for AA8 cells and 1.31 for EM9 cells. Twenty-four-hour recovery ratios for potentially lethal damage repair were 3.2 for AA8 and 3.3 for EM9 cells. Both measurements were made at approximately equitoxic doses. Thus, the defect in EM9 cells that confers radiosensitivity and affects DNA strand-break rejoining does not affect sublethal damage repair or potentially lethal damage repair.  相似文献   

11.
The repair kinetics for rejoining of DNA single- and double-strand breaks after exposure to UVC or gamma radiation was measured in cells with deficiencies in DNA ligase activities and in their normal counterparts. Human 46BR cells were deficient in DNA ligase I. Hamster EM9 and EM-C11 cells were deficient in DNA ligase III activity as a consequence of mutations in the XRCC1 gene. Hamster XR-1 cells had mutation in the XRCC4 gene, whose product stimulates DNA ligase IV activity. DNA single- and double-strand breaks were assessed by the comet assay in alkaline conditions and by the technique of graded-field gel electrophoresis in neutral conditions, respectively. 46BR cells, which are known to re-ligate at a reduced rate the DNA single-strand breaks incurred during processing of damage induced by UVC but not gamma radiation, were shown to have a normal repair of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks. EM9 cells exhibited a reduced rate of rejoining of DNA single-strand breaks after exposure to ionizing radiation, as reported previously, as well as UVC radiation. EM-C11 cells were deficient in the repair of radiation-induced-DNA single-strand breaks but, in contrast to EM9 cells, demonstrated the same kinetics as the parental cell line in the resealing of DNA breaks resulting from exposure to UVC radiation. Both EM9 and EM-C11 cells displayed a significant defect in rejoining of radiation-induced-DNA double-strand breaks. XR-1 cells were confirmed to be highly deficient in the repair of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks but appeared to rejoin DNA single-strand breaks after UVC and gamma irradiation at rates close to normal. Taken together these results indicate that: (1) DNA ligase I is involved only in nucleotide excision repair; (2) DNA ligase IV plays an important role only in repair of DNA double-strand breaks; and (3) DNA ligase III is implicated in base excision repair and in repair of DNA double-strand breaks, but probably not in nucleotide excision repair.  相似文献   

12.
The production and rejoining of DNA single-strand and double-strand breaks have been monitored in monolayer cultures of proliferating human skin fibroblasts by means of sensitive techniques. Cells were irradiated with low doses of either 60Co gamma-rays or 14.6 MeV neutrons at 0 degrees C (0-5 Gy for measurement of single-strand breaks by alkaline elution and 0-50 Gy for double-strand breaks measured by neutral elution). The yield of single-strand breaks induced by neutrons was 30 per cent of that produced by the same dose of gamma-rays; whilst in the induction of double-strand breaks neutrons were 1.6 times as effective as gamma-rays. Upon post-irradiation incubation of cells at 37 degrees C, neutron-induced single-strand and double-strand breaks were rejoined with a similar time-course to gamma-induced breaks. Rejoining followed biphasic kinetics; of the single-strand breaks, 50 per cent disappeared within 2 min after gamma-rays and 6-10 min after neutrons. Fifty per cent of the double-strand breaks disappeared within 10 min, after gamma-rays and neutrons. Cells derived from patients suffering from ataxia-telangiectasia showed the same capacity for repair of single- and double-strand breaks induced by 14.6 MeV neutrons, as cells established from normal donors. The comparison of neutrons and gamma-rays in the induction of DNA breaks did not explain the elevated r.b.e. on high LET radiation. However, a study of the variation in the spectrum of lesions induced by different radiation sources will probably contribute to the clarification of the relative importance of other radio products.  相似文献   

13.
There was a 5-fold increase in cytotoxicity for cumene hydroperoxide, 10-fold for tert-butyl hydroperoxide and 25-fold for hydrogen peroxide, under metabolizing conditions (37°C) in comparison to nonmetabolizing conditions (0°C), when human P31 cells were exposed for 60 min. The induction of DNA single-strand breaks correlated poorly with cytotoxicity. Hydrogen peroxide was by far the most effective agent inducing single-strand breaks irrespective of temperature. Cumene hydroperoxide produced fewer strand breaks than tert-butyl hydroperoxide despite its greater cytotoxicity at either 37°C or at 0°C. The pattern of single-strand break induction did not change with temperature. The number of breaks, however, increased when the cells were exposed at 37°C. The pattern of rejoining was similar for hydrogen peroxide- and tert-butyl hydroperoxide-induced breaks at both temperatures whereas the rejoining of cumene hydroperoxide-induced breaks deviated somewhat from this pattern. The results indicate that there is no clear-cut relationship between induction of DNA single-strand breaks and cytotoxicity after hydroperoxide exposure.  相似文献   

14.
The single-strand DNA level in spleen lymphocytes of BALB/c male-mice after 11 month acute exposure to gamma-radiation at doses 1, 3 and 6 Gy has been investigated by comet assay. The results of our study showed that at 11 month after irradiation at different doses a significant increase in the level of DNA breaks in spleen lymphocytes and decrease in the total number of these cells in mice was registered. It is possible that the increase in the DNA breaks is due to the effort of the compensatory proliferation process in lymphoid system that can give the increase in the number of different genetic disturbances in lymphocytes.  相似文献   

15.
A new method is described for detecting DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) that utilizes asymmetric field inversion gel electrophoresis (AFIGE). DNA purified from cells in agarose plugs is subjected to AFIGE and DNA breakage quantitated by the fraction of DNA released from the plug. To test the specificity of the method for DNA DSBs, purified DNA in agarose plugs was treated for increasing times with restriction endonuclease, XhoI. After an initial time period, the fraction of DNA released increased in direct proportion to time. This correlates with the expected response for a randomly broken DNA molecule. In contrast, treatment with the single-strand breaking agent, hydrogen peroxide, over a 1000-fold range produced no release of DNA from the plug. Thus the assay appears to be specific for DNA DSBs and was used to measure DNA breaks induced by gamma radiation. Purified DNA, irradiated in agarose plugs, exhibited a log-linear dose response up to doses that release greater than 90% DNA from the plug. When live cells were irradiated in agarose, a similar linear dose response was observed up to 40 Gy and a significant signal as low as 2.5 Gy. Also in live cells, a threefold lower percentage of DNA was released from the plug over the same dose range. However, less DNA per gray is released at doses above 40 Gy and may reflect a crosslinking effect produced by the irradiation of DNA in live cells. DNA which was "pulse-labeled" was used to test the effect of DNA replication on the ability of AFIGE to detect DNA DSBs. Replicating DNA irradiated in the cell or after purification exhibited a reduced rate of release from the plug per dose of irradiation. Overall, the above results indicate that AFIGE is a sensitive method for detecting DSBs in DNA.  相似文献   

16.
An immunochemical method has been used to detect quantitatively DNA damage caused by ionizing radiation in germ cells. With this method, DNA strand breaks as well as lesions converted into breaks in alkaline medium are measured as a function of controlled partial unwinding of the DNA, a time-dependent process starting at each breakage site, followed by the determination of the relative amount of single-stranded regions by use of a single-strand specific monoclonal antibody. With this method the induction and repair of DNA damage in different cellular stages of spermatogenesis (spermatocytes, round and elongated spermatids) of the hamster were investigated. Germ cells were irradiated in vitro with 60Co-gamma-rays, at doses between 0 and 5 Gy. A linear dose-response relationship was observed. Spermatocytes and round spermatids had normal, fast repair of the lesions when compared with the repair of these sites in cultured V79 or CHO cells and human lymphocytes. The elongated spermatids, however, showed hardly any repair. Similar results were obtained after the in vivo gamma-irradiation of hamsters with doses of 0. 4, and 8 Gy and subsequent isolation of germ cells. The damage was still detectable in the elongated spermatids at 24 h after exposure. The results of the experiments show substantial differences in repair capacity between different stages of germ cell development. Because DNA is the major target for mutation induction, this assay may be useful for assessment of the genetic risk of exposure of male germ cells to ionizing radiation, in relation to the stage of development.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase activities of two human cell lines, the colon carcinoma HT29 and the mesothelioma P31, cultured in medium containing 2% serum, increased from 195 to 541 and from 94 to 361 units/mg of protein respectively after supplementation with 100 nM-selenite. The catalase activity remained unchanged by this treatment. The effects of the obtained variation in glutathione peroxidase activities were investigated by exposing cells to H2O2 and t-butyl hydroperoxide. Selenite supplementation resulted in a decrease in H2O2-induced DNA single-strand breaks in both HT29 and P31 cells. A small, but significant, decrease in the number of DNA single-strand breaks for low doses (10-50 microM) of t-butyl hydroperoxide was found only in P31 cells and not in HT29 cells. We could detect neither induction of double-strand breaks (detection limit approx. 1000 breaks per cell) nor DNA-protein cross-links after exposing the cells to the two peroxides. In spite of the apparent protective effect of increased glutathione peroxidase activity on DNA single-strand break formation, there were no differences between selenite-supplemented and non-supplemented cells in cell survival after exposure to peroxide.  相似文献   

19.
Single-strand breaks are a major form of DNA damage caused by ionizing radiation, and measurement of strand breaks has long been used as an index of overall cellular DNA damage. Most assays for DNA single-strand breaks in cells rely on measuring fractionated DNA samples following alkali denaturation. Quantification is usually achieved by prelabeling cells with radioactive DNA precursors; however, this is not possible in the situation of nondividing cells or freshly isolated tissue. It has previously been demonstrated that the alkali unwinding assay of DNA strand breaks can be quantified by blotting the recovered DNA on nylon membranes and hybridizing with radiolabeled sequence-specific probes. We report here improvements to the technique, which include hot alkali denaturation of DNA samples prior to blotting and the use of carrier DNA that is non-complementary to the radiolabeled probe. Our method allows both single- and double-stranded DNA to be quantified with the same efficiency, thereby improving the sensitivity and reproducibility of the assay, and allows calibration for determination of absolute levels of DNA strand breaks in cells. We also used this method to assay radiation-induced DNA strand breaks in freshly isolated human leukocytes and found them to have a strand break induction rate of 1815 strand breaks/cell/Gy.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the repair kinetics of DNA single-strand breaks (SSBs) and double-strand breaks (DSBs) in unstimulated normal human peripheral blood lymphocytes (HPBL). SSBs and DSBs induced by gamma-irradiation (at 0 degree C) were assayed without radiolabel by alkaline and neutral filter elution, respectively. Incubation of irradiated cells at 37 degrees C for various lengths of time demonstrated that the percent DNA rejoined increased until it reached a plateau at approximately 60 min; this repair plateau underwent no substantial change when incubation continued for 20-24 h. The level of the plateau indicated how closely the elution profile of DNA from cells irradiated and incubated (experimental) resembled the elution profile of DNA from unirradiated cells (control). After 6 Gy and 60 min incubation, the alkaline elution profile of DNA from experimental cells from 5 donors was indistinguishable from that seen in DNA from control cells, suggesting that rejoining of SSBs was complete. In contrast after 100 Gy and 60 min incubation the neutral elution profile of DNA from cells from the same donors demonstrated that, compared to DNA from control cells, rejoining of DSBs was approximately two-thirds complete. In the range of 2-8 Gy, 85-104% of SSBs were rejoined after 60 min incubation; in the range of 30-120 Gy, 46-80% of DSBs were rejoined after 60 min incubation. These unexpected results stand in contrast to our previous studies with confluent normal human diploid fibroblasts (HDF), in which rejoining of both SSBs and DSBs was greater than 90% complete by 60 min repair incubation and 100% complete after 18-24 h.  相似文献   

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