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1.
A simple method for detection of radiation-inducible radiation resistance was developed by irradiating aliquots (0.01 ml) of cell suspension on agar plates. Part of each experimental plate was subjected to an induction treatment, and subsequent radiation resistance was compared with that of untreated cells on the same plate. The UV radiation resistance of a Micrococcus sp. was increased approximately 1.6 times by an induction treatment. This simple procedure of irradiating cells in a "fixed" position on agar avoided washing, centrifugation, and cell enumeration required in traditional methods.  相似文献   

2.
The study of the ability of chemotherapeutic agents and/or ionizing radiation (IR) to induce cell death in tumor cells is essential for setting up new and more efficient therapies against human cancer. Since drug and ionizing radiation resistance is an impediment to successful chemotherapy against cancer, we wanted to check if etoposide/ionizing radiation combined treatment could have a synergic effect to improve cell death in K562, a well-known human erythroleukemia ionizing radiation resistant cell line. In this study, we examined the role played by JNK/SAPK, p53, and mitochondrial pathways in cell death response of K562 cells to etoposide and IR treatment. Our results let us suppose that the induction of cell death, already evident in 15 Gy exposed cells, mainly in 15 Gy plus etoposide, may be mediated by JNK/SAPK pathway. Moreover, p53 is a potential substrate for JNK and may act as a JNK target for etoposide and ionizing radiation. Thus further investigation on these and other molecular mechanisms underlying the cell death response following etoposide and ionizing radiation exposure could be useful to overcome resistance mechanisms in tumor cells.  相似文献   

3.
Yeast, as well as higher eukaryotes, are induced to increase thermal resistance (thermotolerance) by prior exposure to a heat stress. Prior exposure to an acute dose of either 60Co gamma or 254-nm ultraviolet radiation, at sublethal or fractionally lethal doses, is shown to cause a marked increase in the resistance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to killing by heat. Following a radiation exposure, thermal resistance increased with time during incubation in nutrient medium, and the degree of resistance reached was proportional to the dose received. Partial induction by radiation followed by maximum induction by heat did not produce an additive response when compared to a maximum induction by heat alone, suggesting that the same process was induced by both heat and radiation. Irradiation with 254-nm uv light followed by an immediate, partial photoreversal of the pyrimidine dimers with long-wavelength uv light resulted in a reduced level of resistance compared to cells not exposed to the photoreversal light, indicating that the cells specifically recognized pyrimidine dimers as a signal to increase their thermal resistance. Exposure to 254-nm uv or ionizing radiation induced thermal resistance in mutants defective in either excision repair (rad3, uv-sensitive) or recombinational repair (rad52, gamma-sensitive), suggesting that recognition and repair of DNA damage by these systems are not a part of the signal which initiates an increase in resistance to heat. The amount of induction, per unit dose, was greater in the DNA repair-deficient mutants than in the wild-type cells, suggesting that an increase in the length of time during which damage remains in the DNA results in an increase in the effectiveness of the induction. These data indicate that types of DNA damage as diverse as those produced by ionizing radiation and by ultraviolet light are recognized as a signal by the yeast cell to increase its thermal resistance. It is therefore suggested that heat-induced alterations in DNA or in DNA-dependent chromosomal organization may be the signal for heat induction of thermotolerance in this and other eukaryotes.  相似文献   

4.
The radiation sensitivity of four strains of Bacillus cereus was investigated with attention to bacterial surface structure. All four strains were sensitive to radiation with gamma rays (D(10)=0.4 kGy). No crystalline surface protein layer could be detected on the cell surface. When cultured on solid media, an S-layer covered the cells of the two strains, and they were 2.6 times as resistant to radiation as the two reference strains without an S-layer. In SDS-PAGE, a major 97-kDa band from the resistant strains from plate cultures was replaced by a ca. 85-kDa protein band in samples from broth cultures. Electron microscopy, SDS-PAGE, Western blot and fluorescent antibody staining indicated that the higher resistance to radiation of the clinical strains from plate cultures was associated with the presence of the S-layer on the cell surface.  相似文献   

5.
Around 30 years ago, a very prominent molecular biologist confidently proclaimed that nothing of fundamental importance has ever been learned by irradiating cells! The poor man obviously did not know about discoveries such as DNA repair, mutagenesis, connections between mutagenesis and carcinogenesis, genomic instability, transposable genetic elements, cell cycle checkpoints, or lines of evidence historically linking the genetic material with nucleic acids, or origins of the subject of oxidative stress in organisms, to name a few things of fundamental importance learned by irradiating cells that were well known even at that time. Early radiation studies were, quite naturally, phenomenological. They led to the realization that radiations could cause pronounced biological effects. This was followed by an accelerating expansion of investigations of the nature of these radiobiological phenomena, the beginnings of studies aimed toward better understanding the underlying mechanisms, and a better appreciation of the far-reaching implications for biology, and for society in general. Areas of principal importance included acute tissue and tumor responses for applications in medicine, whole-body radiation effects in plants and animals, radiation genetics and cytogenetics, mutagenesis, carcinogenesis, cellular radiation responses including cell reproductive death, cell cycle effects and checkpoint responses, underlying molecular targets leading to biological effects, DNA repair, and the genetic control of radiosensitivity. This review summarizes some of the highlights in these areas, and points to numerous examples where indeed, many things of considerable fundamental importance have been learned by irradiating cells.  相似文献   

6.
The radioadaptive response and the bystander effect represent important phenomena in radiobiology that have an impact on novel biological response mechanisms and risk estimates. Micromass cultures of limb bud cells provide an in vitro cellular maturation system in which the progression of cell proliferation and differentiation parallels that in vivo. This paper presents for the first time evidence for the correlation and interaction in a micromass culture system between the radioadaptive response and the bystander effect. A radioadaptive response was induced in limb bud cells of embryonic day 11 ICR mice. Conditioning irradiation of the embryonic day 11 cells with 0.3 Gy resulted in a significant protective effect against the occurrence of apoptosis, inhibition of cell proliferation, and differentiation induced by a challenging dose of 5 Gy given the next day. Both protective and detrimental bystander effects were observed; namely, irradiating 50% of the embryonic day 11 cells with 0.3 Gy led to a successful induction of the protective effect, and irradiating 70% of the embryonic day 12 cells with 5 Gy produced a detrimental effect comparable to that seen when all the cells were irradiated. Further, the bystander effect was markedly decreased by pretreatment of the cells with an inhibitor to block the gap junction-mediated intercellular communication. These results indicate that the bystander effect plays an important role in both the induction of a protective effect by the conditioning dose and the detrimental effect of the challenge irradiation. Gap junction-mediated intercellular communication was suggested to be involved in the induction of the bystander effect.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Heat treatment (41 degrees C, 30 min) given before gamma-irradiation results in an increase in radiation resistance of primordial germ cells (PGCs) in Oryzias latipes at a mitotically inactive stage. This may be attributed to the appearance of a shoulder region on the dose-response curve, indicating an increased capacity to tolerate radiation damage. The radiation response curve is biphasic and the conversion of a radiosensitive population to a less sensitive one as a result of heat treatment is suggested. When the PGCs were made thermotolerant by a 'priming' heat treatment (41 degrees C, 10 min) a second heat treatment (41 degrees C, 30 min) at 2 h interval did not induce resistance to radiation. A treatment of 41 degrees C for 30 min without 'priming' gave a thermal reduction ratio of 4.6, whereas with 'priming' the ratio was 1.0. Thus heat induces radiation resistance in PGCs but this induction is suppressed under thermotolerant conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Ganglioside GD3 sensitizes human hepatoma cells to cancer therapy   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Ganglioside GD3 (GD3) has emerged as a modulator of cell death pathways due to its ability to interact with mitochondria and disable survival pathways. Because NF-kappaB activation contributes to cancer therapy resistance, this study was undertaken to test whether GD3 modulates the response of human hepatoblastoma HepG2 cells to radio- and chemotherapy. NF-kappaB was activated in HepG2 cells shortly after therapeutic doses of ionizing radiation or daunorubicin treatment that translated into up-regulation of kappaB-dependent genes. These effects were accompanied by minimal killing of HepG2 cells by either ionizing radiation or daunorubicin. However, GD3 pretreatment blocked the nuclear translocation of active kappaB members, without effect on Akt phosphorylation, induced by either treatment. The suppression of kappaB-dependent gene induction by GD3 was accompanied by enhanced apoptotic cell death caused by these therapies. Furthermore, the combination of GD3 plus ionizing radiation stimulated the formation of reactive species followed by the mitochondrial release of cytochrome c and Smac/Diablo and caspase 3 activation. Pretreatment with cyclosporin A before radiotherapy protected HepG2 cells from the therapeutic combination of GD3 plus ionizing radiation. These findings underscore a key role of mitochondria in the response of tumor cells to cancer therapy and highlight the potential relevance of GD3 to overcome resistance to cancer therapy by combining its dual action as a mitochondria-interacting and NF-kappaB-inactivating agent.  相似文献   

10.
Myxospore differentiation during the developmental cycle of Myxococcus xanthus is characterized by several distinguishable morphological stages. Two experimentally useful criteria of myxospore induction are the conversion of vegetative rods to optically refractile short rods or ovoids and the development of resistance to sonic lysis. The use of optical refractility as the first morphological criterion of myxospore induction has facilitated an analysis of induction on developmental plates. The time-dependent changes in the cell population from vegetative rods to the final products of development, autolysed cells and myxospores, were determined in liquid suspension by interrupting cells from developmental plates before the first appearance of myxospores. The treatment of cells involved a two-step induction system. The cells were first aerated in buffer at 32 degrees C (preinduction) and then aerated in 1% tryptone (Difco) at 32 degrees C (induction). At early plate times (0 to 18 h) there was little or no response to these treatments. After 18 h, many of the cells undergoing development on plates responded to preinduction in buffer by subsequent induction to myxospores in tryptone medium (intermediate cells). After 32 h, cells induced to myxospores in tryptone medium and did not require preinduction (competent cells). After 36 h, cells begin to undergo differentiation to myxospores on plates. These results indicate that there was a sequence of physiological changes in developing cells that are defined by the differential response of cells to treatment in liquid suspension. The liquid induction system described here provides a means to analyze the regulation of developmental myxospore induction.  相似文献   

11.
A new assay has been developed to study the osmotic fragility of red blood cells (RBCs) and the involvement of oxygen-derived free radicals and other oxidant species in causing human red blood cell hemolysis. The amount of hemoglobin released into the supernatant, which is a measure of human red blood cell hemolysis, is monitored using an ELISA reader. This ELISA-based osmotic fragility test compared well with the established osmotic fragility test, with the added advantage of significantly reduced time and the requirement of only 60 mul of blood. This small amount of blood was collected fresh by finger puncture and was immediately diluted 50 times with PBS, thus eliminating the use of anticoagulants and the subsequent washings. Since exposure of RBCs to 400 Gy gamma radiation caused less than 5% hemolysis 24 h after irradiation, the RBC hemolysis induced by gamma radiation was amplified by irradiating the cell in hypotonic saline. The method was validated by examining the protective effect of Trolox, an analog of vitamin E and reduced glutathione (GSH), a well-known radioprotector, against human RBC hemolysis caused by the combined action of radiation and osmotic stress. Trolox, a known membrane stabilizer and an antioxidant, and GSH offered significant protection. This new method, which is simple and requires significantly less time and fewer RBCs, may offer the ability to study the effects of antioxidants and membrane stabilizers on human red blood cell hemolysis induced by radiation and oxidative stress and assess the osmotic fragility of erythrocytes.  相似文献   

12.
Available data suggesting the occurrence of "bystander effects" (i.e. damage induction in cells not traversed by radiation) were collected and critically evaluated, in view of the development of low-dose risk models. Although the underlying mechanisms are largely unknown, cellular communication seems to play a key role. In this context, the main features of cellular communication were summarised and a few representative studies on bystander effects were reported and discussed. Three main approaches were identified: (1) conventional irradiation of cell cultures with very low doses of light ions; (2) irradiation of single cells with microbeam probes; (3) treatment with irradiated conditioned medium (ICM), i.e. feeding of unexposed cells with medium taken from irradiated cultures. Indication of different types of bystander damage (e.g. cell killing, gene mutations and modifications in gene expression) has been found in each of the three cases. The interpretations proposed by the investigators were discussed and possible biases introduced by specific experimental conditions were outlined. New arguments and experiments were suggested, with the main purpose of obtaining quantitative information to be included in models of low-dose radiation action. Implications in interpreting low-dose data and modelling low-dose effects at cellular and supra-cellular level, including cancer induction, were analysed. Possible synergism with other low-dose specific phenomena such as adaptive response (AR) (i.e. low-dose induced resistance to subsequent irradiation) was discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The thioredoxin system is a promising target when aiming to overcome the problem of clinical radiation resistance. Altered cellular redox status and redox sensitive thiols contributing to induction of resistance strongly connect the ubiquitous redox enzyme thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) to the cellular response to ionizing radiation. To further investigate possible strategies in combating clinical radiation resistance, human radio-resistant lung cancer cells were subjected to a combination of single fractions of γ-radiation at clinically relevant doses and non-toxic levels of a well-characterized thioredoxin reductase inhibitor, the phosphine gold(I) compound [Au(SCN)(PEt(3))]. The combination of the TrxR-inhibitor and ionizing radiation reduced the surviving fractions and impaired the ability of the U1810 cells to repopulate by approximately 50%. In addition, inhibition of thioredoxin reductase caused changes in the cell cycle distribution, suggesting a disturbance of the mitotic process. Global gene expression analysis also revealed clustered genetic expression changes connected to several major cellular pathways such as cell cycle, cellular response to stress and DNA damage. Specific TrxR-inhibition as a factor behind the achieved results was confirmed by correlation of gene expression patterns between gold and siRNA treatment. These results clearly demonstrate TrxR as an important factor conferring resistance to irradiation and the use of [Au(SCN)(PEt(3))] as a promising radiosensitizing agent.  相似文献   

14.
The Src-related tyrosine kinase, Lyn, plays an important role in mediating the cell cycle arrest and cell death response to genotoxic agents such as ionizing radiation. In this report we provide evidence to show that the catalytic function of Lyn is required for ultraviolet radiation (UV)- and methyl methanesulfonate (MMS)- but not for cisplatin (CDDP)- or ionizing radiation (IR)-induced cell death. Consequently, fibroblasts deficient in Lyn function were protected against cell death induction by UV and MMS, but showed normal cell death to IR and CDDP treatment. In Lyn(-/-) cells, UV-induced activation of stress-responsive kinases, Erk1/2 and p38, was normal; however, JNK activation was diminished. In addition, FasL induction by UV was also diminished in these cells. Reintroduction of wild-type Lyn restored JNK activation, FasL induction, and sensitivity to UV and MMS. A role for FasL in the cell death induction by Lyn-JNK signaling is indicated by the inhibition of cell death response by FasL neutralizing antibody. Together, the results support the presence of the Lyn-JNK signaling pathway that mediates the cell death response to UV and MMS treatment through FasL induction.  相似文献   

15.
《Autophagy》2013,9(5):659-668
Autophagy has been reported to be increased in irradiated cancer cells resistant to various apoptotic stimuli. We therefore hypothesized that induction of autophagy via mTOR inhibition enhances radiosensitization in apoptosis-inhibited H460 lung cancer cells in vitro and in a lung cancer xenograft model. To test this hypothesis, combinations of Z-DEVD (caspase-3 inhibitor), RAD001 (mTOR inhibitor) and irradiation were tested in cell and mouse models. The combination of Z-DEVD and RAD001 more potently radiosensitized H460 cells than individual treatment alone. The enhancement in radiation response was not only evident in clonogenic survival assays, but also was demonstrated through markedly reduced tumor growth, cellular proliferation (Ki67 staining), apoptosis (TUNEL staining), and angiogenesis (vWF staining) in vivo. Additionally, upregulation of autophagy as measured by increased GFP-LC3-tagged autophagosome formation accompanied the noted radiosensitization in vitro and in vivo. The greatest induction of autophagy and associated radiation toxicity was exhibited in the tri-modality treatment group. Autophagy marker, LC-3-II, was reduced by 3-methyladenine (3-MA), a known inhibitor of autophagy, but further increased by the addition of lysosomal protease inhibitors (pepstatin A and E64d), demonstrating that there is autophagic induction through type III PI3 kinase during the combined therapy. Knocking down of ATG5 and beclin-1, two essential autophagic molecules, resulted in radiation resistance of lung cancer cells. Our report suggests that combined inhibition of apoptosis and mTOR during radiotherapy is a potential therapeutic strategy to enhance radiation therapy in patients with non-small cell lung cancer.  相似文献   

16.
Kim KW  Hwang M  Moretti L  Jaboin JJ  Cha YI  Lu B 《Autophagy》2008,4(5):659-668
Autophagy has been reported to be increased in irradiated cancer cells resistant to various apoptotic stimuli. We therefore hypothesized that induction of autophagy via mTOR inhibition could enhance radiosensitization in apoptosis-inhibited H460 lung cancer cells in vitro and in a lung cancer xenograft model. To test this hypothesis, combinations of Z-DEVD (caspase-3 inhibitor), RAD001 (mTOR inhibitor) and irradiation were tested in cell and mouse models. The combination of Z-DEVD and RAD001 more potently radiosensitized H460 cells than individual treatment alone. The enhancement in radiation response was not only evident in clonogenic survival assays, but also was demonstrated through markedly reduced tumor growth, cellular proliferation (Ki67 staining), apoptosis (TUNEL staining) and angiogenesis (vWF staining) in vivo. Additionally, upregulation of autophagy as measured by increased GFP-LC3-tagged autophagosome formation accompanied the noted radiosensitization in vitro and in vivo. The greatest induction of autophagy and associated radiation toxicity was exhibited in the tri-modality treatment group. Autophagy marker, LC-3-II, was reduced by 3-methyladenine (3-MA), a known inhibitor of autophagy, but further increased by the addition of lysosomal protease inhibitors (pepstatin A and E64d), demonstrating that there is autophagic induction through type III PI3 kinase during the combined therapy. Knocking down of ATG5 and beclin-1, two essential autophagic molecules, resulted in radiation resistance of lung cancer cells. Our report suggests that combined inhibition of apoptosis and mTOR during radiotherapy is a potential therapeutic strategy to enhance radiation therapy in patients with non-small cell lung cancer.  相似文献   

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

18.
Radiation is a well established therapeutic modality for the treatment of solid tumors. By merging molecular biological approaches with radiation biology, a significant number of signaling events elicited by ionizing radiation have been delineated. These signaling pathways include events leading to cell cycle arrest, apoptosis or cell survival. There are two major signaling events that affect radiation response. One is the intrinsic/constitutive pro-survival signaling event that is present in proliferating tumor cells while the other is "induced pro-survival event" in response to radiation, both of these events confer resistance to the killing effects of radiation. In this review, signaling pathways that lead to either apoptosis or survival of cells following ionizing radiation are discussed in detail. In addition, mechanisms of action for gene/drug based inhibitors that modulate the expression and function of various genes and gene products involved in pro-survival signaling pathways are described. Further, novel strategies to abrogate the "induced radiation resistance" leading to enhanced therapeutic efficacy of ionizing radiation have been proposed. These novel strategies include the use of radio-gene therapy, low dose fractionated radiation therapy as a chemopotentiator and therapeutic utility of high radiation dose induced bystander effect. The complete understanding of the molecular pathways leading to apoptosis/survival of cells following ionizing radiation will help in tailoring more effective novel strategies and treatment modalities for complete eradication of cancer.  相似文献   

19.
Exposure of the two related human leukemic cell lines U937 and TUR to chemotherapeutic compounds resulted in opposite effects on induction and resistance to apoptosis. Incubation of U937 cells with 1-β- -arabinofuranosylcytosine or the etoposide VP-16 was accompanied by growth arrest in G0/G1of the cell cycle and an accumulation of a population in the sub-G1phase which exhibited characteristics typical for the apoptotic pathway. In contrast, human TUR leukemia cells demonstrated no significant effects after a similar treatment with Ara-C and VP-16. Thus, TUR cells continued to proliferate in the presence of these anti-cancer drugs and the number of apoptotic cells as evaluated by propidium iodide staining and the detection of internucleosomal DNA fragmentation was significantly reduced when compared to the parental U937 cells. Similar effects were observed upon serum-starvation demonstrating resistance to apoptosis in TUR cells. Whereas induction of apoptosis is regulated by a network of distinct factors including the activation of proteolytically active caspases, we investigated these pathways in both cell lines. U937 cells demonstrated activation of the 32-kDa caspase-3 upon drug treatment by cleavage into the 20-kDa activated form. However, there was no 20-kDa caspase-3 fragment detectable in TUR cells. Simultaneously, the enzymatic activity of caspase-3 was significantly increased in drug-treated U937 cells as measuredin vitroby enhanced metabolization of a fluorescence substrate andin vivoby cleavage of an appropriate substrate for caspase-3, namely, protein kinase Cδ. In contrast, there was little if any caspase-3 activation detectable in drug-treated TUR cells. Taken together, these data suggest a signaling defect in the activation of the caspase-3 proteolytic system in TUR cells upon treatment with chemotherapeutic compounds which is associated with resistance to apoptosis in these human leukemia cells.  相似文献   

20.
A multi-drug-resistant cell line selected in increasing concentrations of Adriamycin and designated LZ (J. A. Belli, Radiat. Res. 119, 88-100, 1989) is shown to exhibit a survival response characterized by radiation sensitivity and Adriamycin resistance. To determine if this response is due to alterations in either the initial levels of damage induced or the repair of DNA damage, LZ cells and the parental V79 cells were exposed to either radiation or Adriamycin and the damage and repair were measured with alkaline or nondenaturing filter elution. After exposure to radiation, induction and repair of both single-strand and double-strand breaks were equivalent. LZ cells exposed to 100 micrograms/ml Adriamycin for 1 h contained no measurable damage while the same treatment induced breaks and crosslinks in V79 cells. Pretreatment of LZ cells for 1 h with Adriamycin before irradiation did not alter either the initial levels of induced damage or the repair of strand breakage. These results suggest that (1) mechanisms other than differential induction and repair of strand breaks are responsible for the increased radiation sensitivity in LZ, and (2) the lack of Adriamycin-induced DNA damage in LZ is at least partially responsible for the increased cell survival after treatment.  相似文献   

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