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1.
The effects of continuous low dose-rate irradiation are studied with a computer model that incorporates cell kinetics and the accumulation and repair of radiation damage. This theoretical approach independently explores the effects on survival curves of a phase block, inherited damage and proliferation by dying cells. The computer model is a Monte Carlo simulation which follows the evolution in time of the family trees of a growing cell population under continuous irradiation. The model uses as input the measured phase-specific survival curves for acute exposures and the cell kinetic parameters to generate survival curves for continuous low dose-rate irradiations. Cell survival curves for Chinese hamster lung cells (V79) for dose rates ranging from 15 to 500 cGy/h have been generated using various model assumptions. The model shows that for these cells a G2 block will maximize cell killing for an optimum dose rate near 75 cGy/h. The effect on survival curves of inherited damage, as well as that of the proliferation by dying cells, is shown to increase monotonically with decreasing dose rates, and to be quite large at low dose rates.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract. The effects of continuous low dose-rate irradiation are studied with a computer model that incorporates cell kinetics and the accumulation and repair of radiation damage. This theoretical approach independently explores the effects on survival curves of a phase block, inherited damage and proliferation by dying cells. the computer model is a Monte Carlo simulation which follows the evolution in time of the family trees of a growing cell population under continuous irradiation. the model uses as input the measured phase-specific survival curves for acute exposures and the cell kinetic parameters to generate survival curves for continous low dose-rate irradiations. Cell survival curves for Chinese hamster lung cells (V79) for dose rates ranging from 15 to 500 cGy/h have been generated using various model assumptions. the model shows that for these cells a G2 block will maximize cell killing for an optimum dose rate near 75 cGy/h. the effect on survival curves of inherited damage, as well as that of the proliferation by dying cells, is shown to increase monotonically with decreasing dose rates, and to be quite large at low dose rates.  相似文献   

3.
Survival as well as repair of DNA strand breaks were studied in CHO cells after exposure to internal beta-rays from incorporated [3H]thymidine at 4 degrees C (equivalent to an exposure at 'infinitely high' dose rate) and at 37 degrees C (low dose rate). DNA strand breaks were determined by the alkaline unwinding technique. In cells exposed at 4 degrees C cell killing was five times higher (Do = 250 decays per cell) than in cells exposed at 37 degrees C (Do = 1280 decays per cell). Strand breaks induced by 3H decay at 37 degrees C were repaired with the same kinetics as those generated at 4 degrees C. Therefore the different degrees of cell killing at 4 degrees C and 37 degrees C cannot be attributed to a difference in the repair kinetics for DNA strand breaks.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The aim of this study is to determine whether the repair process in log-phase Chinese hamster V79 cells exposed to X rays is unsaturated, saturable, or saturated. The kinetics of recovery from damage induced by 2 to 14 Gy of 250 kVp X rays was studied by treating cells with 0.5 M hypertonic saline for 20 min at different postirradiation repair intervals. From the kinetic data, the repair half-time (t1/2), the repair time (time needed to attain maximal survival), and the recovery ratio were calculated. The results show that the t1/2 (1.42 min/Gy) and the repair time (6.04 min/Gy) increase linearly with dose, the logarithm of the recovery ratio increases linear-quadratically with dose, and the D0 increases linearly with repair interval at a rate of 2.4 cGy/min. From these results we suggest a model: the repair of damage (undefined lesions) necessary for cell survival is effected by a repair process (t 1/2 of 1.42 min/Gy) which is saturated at doses as low as 2.4 cGy; repair saturation leads to a dose-dependent accumulation of repairable lesions; and interaction among accumulated repairable lesions results in the induction of irreparable (lethal) lesions. We call this the accumulation-interaction model of cell killing by low-LET radiation.  相似文献   

6.
Irradiation time and dose rate are important factors in the evaluation of radiation risk for human health. We previously proposed a novel dose-rate effect model, the modified exponential (MOE) model, which predicts that radiation risks decline exponentially as the dose rate decreases. Here we show that, during the early phase of exposure, up to 1000 h, the proliferation of cells continuously exposed to γ rays at a constant dose rate is gradually suppressed, even as the total dose increases. This trend holds for a number of cell lines including tumor cells, nontransformed fibroblasts and leukocytes. The accumulation of total dose by longer exposure times does not increase this suppressive effect even in cells with a defective DNA repair system, suggesting that risk is determined solely by dose rate in the later phase. The dose-rate effect in the early phase follows the MOE model in DNA repair-proficient cell lines, while cells with impaired DNA-PK or ATM show no dose-rate effect. In the later phase, however, a certain dose-rate effect is observed even in mutant cell lines, and suppression of cell proliferation no longer follows the MOE model. Our results suggest that a distinct mechanism that can operate in the absence of intact DNA-PK or ATM influences the dose-rate effect in the later phase of continuous radiation exposure.  相似文献   

7.
A model of radiation action is described which unifies several of the major existing concepts which have been applied to cell killing. Called the lethal and potentially lethal (LPL) model, it combines the ideas of lesion interaction, irreparable lesions caused by single tracks, linear lesion fixation, lesion repair via first-order kinetics, and binary misrepair. Two different kinds of lesions are hypothesized: irreparable (lethal) and repairable (potentially lethal) lesions. They are tentatively being identified with DNA double-strand breaks of different severity. Two processes compete for depletion of the potentially lethal lesions: correct repair following first-order kinetics, and misrepair following second-order kinetics. Fixation of these lesions can also occur. The model applies presently only to plateau (stationary)-phase cells. Radiobiological phenomena described include effects of low dose rate, high LET, and repair kinetics as measured with repair inhibitors such as hypertonic solution and beta-arabinofuranosyladenine (beta-araA). One consequence of the model is that repair of sublethal damage and the slow component of the repair of potentially lethal damage are two manifestations of the same repair process. Hypertonic treatment fixes a completely new class of lesions which normally repair correctly. Another consequence of the model is that the initial slope of the survival curve depends on the amount of time available for repair after irradiation. The "dose-rate factor" occurring in several linear-quadratic formulations is shown to emerge when appropriate low-dose and long-repair-time approximations are made.  相似文献   

8.
The survival probability of a living cell exposed to ionizing radiation in an experimental setup is derived. The survival of a cell depends on the severity of the radiation damage and efficiency of the cellular repair. The formula of the survival probability is expressed as a function of dose, nonlinear rate of lesion induction, nonlinear rate of cellular repair, and a key experimental parameter--the holding time. The result is an extension of the Markovian dose-response model developed by Yang and Swenberg.  相似文献   

9.
An incomplete-repair (IR) model of survival after fractionated or continuous irradiation is derived from the concept of 'dose-equivalent' of incomplete repair. The model gives reasonably good predictions of the effect of interfraction interval, dose per fraction, and dose rate on cell survival in vivo and on tissue responses. This model is compared to the 'lethal, potentially lethal' (LPL) model after the latter has been generalized to an arbitrary number of fractions and to low dose-rate, continuous exposures. It is shown that the two models are equivalent, given certain constraints on the size of dose per fraction and dose rate. For example, in a particular cell line the equivalence of fractionation models breaks down if dose per fraction is well in excess of 4 Gy (the IR model employs the linear-quadratic survival model). The equivalence of low dose rate models breaks down for dose rates well in excess of 20 cGy/min. The assumptions on which the generalized LPL model is based are used to give a radiobiological interpretation to the incomplete-repair model. The larger beta/alpha ratio characteristic of late-responding normal tissues is interpreted in terms of the relatively faster fixation of potentially reparable lesions in the target cells of acutely responding tissues, on account of progression in the cell cycle. According to this interpretation the beta/alpha ratios estimated from isoeffective fractionation regimens are directly related to the parameters of clonogenic cell killing.  相似文献   

10.
Although the majority of mammalian cells in situ are terminally differentiated, most DNA repair studies have used proliferating cells. In an attempt to understand better the relationship between differentiation and DNA repair, we have used the murine 3T3-T proadipocyte cell line. In this model system, proliferating (stem) cells undergo growth arrest (GD cells) and subsequently terminally differentiate into adipocytes when exposed to media containing platelet-depleted human plasma. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis was used to evaluate the induction and repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) after ionizing radiation. The levels of radiation-induced DSBs in GD and terminally differentiated cells were similar, but in both cases greater than those found in stem cells at each radiation dose tested (0 to 40 Gy); these differences appear to be due to growth arrest in G1 phase. DNA DSBs were repaired with biphasic kinetics for each cell type. For terminally differentiated cells 25% of DNA DSBs remained unrejoined compared with < 10% for GD and stem cells after a repair time of 4 h. These data indicate that terminal differentiation of 3T3-T cells is associated with a reduction in the repair of ionizing radiation-induced DNA DSBs.  相似文献   

11.
The aim of this study was to investigate a possible influence of occupational exposure to carcinogenic environmental polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (c-PAHs) on cellular susceptibility to the induction of the DNA damage. Monitoring was performed and blood samples were collected from two groups of male subjects: occupationally exposed and matched controls. The group exposed to c-PAHs (average age of 35.1 years) consisted of 52 policemen from Košice and 26 policemen and 25 bus drivers (51 altogether) from Sofia. The control group (average age of 36.4 years) consisted of 54 unexposed subjects from Košice and 24 from Sofia. In the investigated groups 52.5% of exposed subjects and 45.3% of control were current smokers. A challenging dose of X-rays (3 Gy) and an alkaline version of the single cell gel electrophoresis (SCGE) assay, known as Comet assay, were used to evaluate levels of induced DNA damage and repair kinetics in isolated human blood lymphocytes. DNA damage detected in lymphocytes prior to or after irradiation did not differ significantly between exposed and unexposed subjects. A significant decrease in repair efficiency due to exposure to PAHs was observed in the exposed individuals from Košice and Sofia, when analysed separately or together. A negative influence of tobacco smoking on the efficiency of DNA repair was observed. Statistically significant differences were found between subgroups stratified according to education level in Sofia: the half times for DNA repair declined with the increasing level of education. These results confirm that environmental exposure to c-PAHs can alter the ability of blood lymphocytes to repair DNA damage and, as a result could potentially lead to effects that are hazardous to human health.  相似文献   

12.
We present a new approach to model dose rate effects on cell killing after photon radiation based on the spatio-temporal clustering of DNA double strand breaks (DSBs) within higher order chromatin structures of approximately 1–2 Mbp size, so called giant loops. The main concept of this approach consists of a distinction of two classes of lesions, isolated and clustered DSBs, characterized by the number of double strand breaks induced in a giant loop. We assume a low lethality and fast component of repair for isolated DSBs and a high lethality and slow component of repair for clustered DSBs. With appropriate rates, the temporal transition between the different lesion classes is expressed in terms of five differential equations. These allow formulating the dynamics involved in the competition of damage induction and repair for arbitrary dose rates and fractionation schemes. Final cell survival probabilities are computable with a cell line specific set of three parameters: The lethality for isolated DSBs, the lethality for clustered DSBs and the half-life time of isolated DSBs.By comparison with larger sets of published experimental data it is demonstrated that the model describes the cell line dependent response to treatments using either continuous irradiation at a constant dose rate or to split dose irradiation well. Furthermore, an analytic investigation of the formulation concerning single fraction treatments with constant dose rates in the limiting cases of extremely high or low dose rates is presented. The approach is consistent with the Linear-Quadratic model extended by the Lea-Catcheside factor up to the second moment in dose. Finally, it is shown that the model correctly predicts empirical findings about the dose rate dependence of incidence probabilities for deterministic radiation effects like pneumonitis and the bone marrow syndrome. These findings further support the general concepts on which the approach is based.  相似文献   

13.
The induction of micronuclei in human lymphocytes by low doses of radiation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The appearance of micronuclei (MN) is delayed with respect to cell division in populations of irradiated human lymphocytes, so that the length of time in culture, as well as the number of divisions, is a factor in MN assays. Using two assays that control for cell kinetics, we measured the yield of cells with MN exposed to graded doses of 60Co gamma rays and 90KVP X-rays. The yields showed a non-linear increase with dose. They can be represented by two straight lines: the one in the range below 0.15 Gy has a slight slope, the other in the range above 0.15 Gy has a significantly greater slope. The radical scavengers cysteamine and glycerol, which reduced the MN yields sharply at 3 Gy, were less effective at 0.3 Gy, indicating that terminal deletions arising from the direct ionization of DNA are a major source of the MN induced by low radiation doses. It is likely that the non-linear dose response is due to the saturation of a DNA repair process.  相似文献   

14.
This paper describes a new theoretical model for the response of cells to radiation. This model is based on the existence of a lesion interaction mechanism in the cell, along with processes of recovery and repair that are able to repair the damage produced by radiation in the cells. Such a mechanism makes the cells evolve from a sublethal state to a normal one. Repair and recovery are not instantaneous, but are produced over an average period that we suppose is represented by an exponential function. The probability of cellular recovery and repair is also affected by radiation. These mechanisms become less probable as the dose administered to the cell increases (repair saturation mechanism). This model is suitable for instantaneous doses as well as for arbitrary dose rates. Results obtained from the model for normal tissues and low doses are approximately equal to those obtained by the linear-quadratic model or by the incomplete repair model. The model yields a survival curve with an exponential tail for high doses and for long periods of irradiation.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Numerous investigators have reported that direct exposure of cells to a low dose of ionizing radiation can induce a condition of enhanced radioresistance, i.e. a "radioadaptive" response. In this report, we investigated the hypothesis that a radioadaptive bystander effect may be induced in unirradiated cells by a transmissible factor(s) present in the supernatants of cells exposed to a low dose of alpha particles. Normal human lung fibroblasts (HFL-1) were irradiated with 1 cGy of alpha particles and their supernatants were transferred to unirradiated HFL-1 cells as a bystander cell model. Compared to directly irradiated cells that were not treated with supernatants from HFL-1 cells exposed to low-dose radiation, such treatment resulted in increased clonogenic survival after subsequent exposure to 10 and 19 cGy of alpha particles. Increases in protein levels of AP-endonuclease, a redox and DNA base excision repair protein, were found in the bystander cells, but not in directly irradiated cells. Supernatants from alpha-particle-irradiated cells were also found to increase the clonogenicity of unirradiated cells. These results, in conjunction with our earlier findings that supernatants from cells exposed to a low dose of alpha particles contain growth-promoting activity, suggest that this new bystander effect may be related to an increase in DNA repair and cell growth/cell cycle regulation.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The in situ DNA repair kinetics in intracerebral 9L tumor cells and cerebellar neurons following the second of two 1250- or 2500-rad doses separated by various times have been measured using alkaline sucrose gradients in zonal rotors. For both doses and all times employed, both cell types exhibited biphasic kinetics similar to those observed after single doses. When the two doses were separated by less than 2 hr in neurons (1 hr for tumor cells), the half-time (T1/2) of the slow phase was faster than that expected based on the amount of damage present and remained constant until the observed T1/2 coincided with the expected T1/2. When repair of the damage produced by the first dose was complete, the slow phase after the second dose exhibited the same T1/2 as after a single dose. These results suggest that the accessibility of a fraction of the chromatin is altered for a finite period during the repair process, and upon completion of repair is returned to a state indistinguishable from that existing prior to irradiation.  相似文献   

19.
This research incorporates new biological concepts to improve the predictive ability of a state-vector model with respect to dose-response data on in vitro oncogenic transformation, including mechanisms of DNA damage, DNA repair, cell death, cell proliferation and intercellular communication. Experimentally recognized biological processes, including background transformation, compensatory proliferation and bystander cell-killing effect were formulated mathematically and included as model parameters. These were then adjusted with an optimization method to reproduce in vitro transformation frequency data from C3H10T1/2 mouse cells exposed to acute doses of X-rays. A plateau observed in the data at low doses is reproduced well and a dose-dependent increase above 1Gy is predicted almost precisely. Extension of the model predictions to the dose range 0-100mGy indicates that transformation frequencies are practically constant over this low dose region. Results suggest a protective, rather than detrimental, bystander cell-killing effect. Further analysis of model sensitivity to this bystander parameter, though, revealed uncertainties with respect to its biological plausibility in the model.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of ultraviolet (UV) light on cell morphology, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis, and protein synthesis in UV-sensitive and UV-resistant strains of Haemophilus influenzae were examined. Relatively low doses of UV induce lyses in the sensitive strains but not in the resistant mutant; however, UV temporarily blocks cell division of the resistant mutant, and elongated cells are formed after a period of incubation. Low doses of UV do not stop DNA synthesis in any of the strains examined; however, they do slow the rate of DNA synthesis in a manner consistent with the model correlating the kinetics of postirradiation DNA synthesis with the cell's ability to repair UV-induced DNA lesions. The data are not consistent with a model in which UV causes all DNA synthesis to stop for a time linearly dependent on dose.  相似文献   

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