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1.
2.
The ability of synchronized Ehrlich ascites tumor cells, irradiated in G1, S, and G2 phases, to repair potentially lethal damage when arrested at mitosis by using 0.4 microgram/ml nocodazole, a specific inhibitor of microtubule polymerization, has been studied. Cells irradiated in these phases were found to repair potentially lethal damage at mitosis. The extent of this repair was similar to that observed for cells irradiated at the same stages in the cell cycle but allowed to repair potentially lethal damage by incubating in balanced salt solution for 6 hr after X irradiation.  相似文献   

3.
Hypothermic enhancement of the lethal effect of 3.5 Gy of 220-kV X rays in the absence of caffeine as well as in its presence (4 mM) was examined at temperatures between 10 and 34 degrees C in monolayer cultures in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Correction has been made for the toxicity of low temperatures, and of caffeine at low temperatures, by concomitantly measuring cell killing in unirradiated cells. In the absence of caffeine, incubation of irradiated cells for up to 34 h at temperatures in the range 15 to 30 degrees C (or possibly 34 degrees C) enhances killing compared to that observed at 38 degrees C; the amount of enhancement is about the same throughout this range, but is nil at 10 degrees C. The enhanced killing induced by caffeine at 38 degrees C decreases as the temperature is lowered to 15 degrees C; there is no enhancement at 10 degrees C. Less killing is manifested in the range 15 to 25 degrees C in the presence of caffeine than in its absence. Recovery (loss of sensitivity to caffeine) and fixation of potentially lethal damage were studied in late-S/G2-phase cells at reduced temperatures by delaying treatment with caffeine for increasing times after irradiation. As the temperature is progressively lowered to 20 degrees C, less recovery is manifested after 5 h of incubation; no recovery is detected in the range 10 to 20 degrees C. Despite extensive recovery at 34 degrees C, no fixation is observed at that (or any lower) temperature in G2-phase cells: the cells are able to recover essentially fully when returned to 38 degrees C. In addition, responses of unirradiated control series to incubation at low temperatures appear to differ from those reported by others for longer treatment times of different cell systems.  相似文献   

4.
Survival and G2 delay of L929 mouse fibroblasts exposed to 3.4-MeV alpha particles depend on the cell age at the time of irradiation. Greatest sensitivity for both endpoints has been found at the G1/S transition: The surviving fraction of G1/S cells is reduced to 0.11 following 1 Gy of alpha particles compared to 0.31 for early G1 cells. The G2 + M transit time rises from 3 hr for control cells to 22 and 30 hr for cells irradiated with 0.3 Gy in G2 or at the G1/S boundary, respectively. Cells irradiated in early G1 do not show increased G2 + M transit times. Growth delay as calculated for the entire population increases linearly with dose by 23 hr/Gy of alpha particles.  相似文献   

5.
Potentially lethal damage (PLD) and its repair were studied in confluent human fibroblasts by analyzing the kinetics of chromosome break rejoining and misrejoining in irradiated cells that were either held in noncycling G(0) phase or allowed to enter G(1) phase of the cell cycle immediately after 6 Gy irradiation. Virally mediated premature chromosome condensation (PCC) methods were combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to study chromosomal aberrations in interphase. Flow cytometry revealed that the vast majority of cells had not yet entered S phase 15 h after release from G(0). By this time some 95% of initially produced prematurely condensed chromosome breaks had rejoined, indicating that most repair processes occurred during G(1). The rejoining kinetics of prematurely condensed chromosome breaks was similar for each culture condition. However, under noncycling conditions misrepair peaked at 0.55 exchanges per cell, while under cycling conditions (G(1)) it peaked at 1.1 exchanges per cell. At 12 h postirradiation, complex-type exchanges were sevenfold more abundant for cycling cells (G(1)) than for noncycling cells (G(0)). Since most repair in G(0)/G(1) occurs via the non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) process, increased PLD repair may result from improved cell cycle-specific rejoining fidelity of the NHEJ pathway.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of confluent holding recovery on survival, chromosomal aberrations, and progression through the life cycle after subculture of human diploid fibroblasts X-irradiated during density inhibition of growth have been examined. The responses of three normal strains were determined and compared with those of four ataxia-telangiectasia (AT), an AT heterozygote, and two hereditary retinoblastoma strains. The capacity for potentially lethal damage repair (PLDR) was slightly reduced in retinoblastoma cells and almost absent in AT cells, but normal in an AT heterozygote. The decline in chromosomal aberrations seen in normal cells during confluent holding was absent in AT cells, consistent with the lack of PLDR. Following subculture, all irradiated AT fibroblasts progressed through the cell cycle to the first mitosis with no delay. AT heterozygotic and retinoblastoma cells showed both an enhanced delay in the initiation of DNA synthesis and a large fraction of cells irreversibly blocked in G1 as compared with normal cells. Both the delayed entry into S and the G1 block were reduced by confluent holding. These results indicate that AT homozygotic and heterozygotic cells respond quite differently to X irradiation.  相似文献   

7.
To study the effect of nucleotide excision repair on the spectrum of mutations induced in diploid human fibroblasts by UV light (wavelength, 254 nm), we synchronized repair-proficient cells and irradiated them when the HPRT gene was about to be replicated (early S phase) so that there would be no time for repair in that gene before replication, or in G1 phase 6 h prior to S, and determined the kinds and location of mutations in that gene. As a control, we also compared the spectra of mutations induced in synchronized populations of xeroderma pigmentosum cells (XP12BE cells, which are unable to excise UV-induced DNA damage). Among the 84 mutants sequenced, base substitutions predominated. Of the XP mutants from S or G1 and the repair-proficient mutants from S, approximately 62% were G.C----A.T. In the repair-proficient mutants from G1, 47% were. In mutants from the repair-proficient cells irradiated in S, 71% (10 of 14) of the premutagenic lesions were located in the transcribed strand; with mutants from such cells irradiated in G1, only 20% (3 of 15) were. In contrast, there was no statistically significant difference in the fraction of premutagenic lesions located in the transcribed strand of the XP12BE cells; approximately 75% (24 of 32) of the premutagenic lesions were located in that strand, i.e., 15 of 19 (79%) in the S-phase cells and 9 of 13 (69%) in the G1-phase cells. The switch in strand bias supports preferential nucleotide excision repair of UV-induced damage in the transcribed strand of the HPRT gene.  相似文献   

8.
The survival of synchronized V79 Chinese hamster cells irradiated with near-ultraviolet light after a 1-h labeling with 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdUrd) is highly dependent upon the cell's position in the cell cycle at the time of irradiation (Hagan, M., and M. M. Elkind. Biophys. J. 1979. 27:75-86). In this report, we show that cells irradiated in the same S phase after BrdUrd incorporation demonstrate an ability to repair sublethal damage, in contrast to the lack of an increase in survival with dose fractionation in template-labeled cells (Ben-Hur, E., and M. M. Elkind. Mutat. Res. 1972. 14:236-245). In addition, we show that pulse-labeled cells in S phase can repair potentially lethal damage expressed by caffeine. The kinetics of these recovery processes and the absence of a caffeine effect on the repair of sublethal damage indicate that these two processes are to a large degree unrelated. We conclude that in template-labeled cells inadequate time to effect prereplicational repair precludes effective contributions to cell survival from other kinds of DNa repair processes.  相似文献   

9.
In order to evaluate the relative role of two major DNA double strand break repair pathways, i.e., non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) and homologous recombination repair (HRR), CHO mutants deficient in these two pathways and the parental cells (AA8) were X-irradiated with various doses. The cells were harvested at different times after irradiation, representing G2, S and G1 phase at the time of irradiation, The mutant cell lines used were V33 (NHEJ deficient), Irs1SF, 51-D1 (HRR deficient). In addition to parental cell line (AA8), a revertant of V33, namely V33-155 was employed. Both types of mutant cells responded with increased frequencies of chromosomal aberrations at all recovery times in comparison to the parental and revertant cells. Mutant cells deficient in NHEJ were more sensitive in all cell stages in comparison to HRR deficient mutant cells, indicating NHEJ is the major repair pathway for DSB repair through out the cell cycle. Both chromosome and chromatid types of exchange aberrations were observed following G1 irradiation (16 and 24 h recovery). Interestingly, configurations involving both chromosome (dicentrics) and chromatid exchanges were encountered in G1 irradiated V33 cells. This may indicate that unrepaired DSBs accumulate in G1 in these mutant cells and carried over to S phase, where they are repaired by HRR or other pathways such as B-NHEJ (back up NHEJ), which appear to be highly error prone. Both NHEJ and HRR, which share some of the same proteins in their pathways, are involved in the repair of DSBs leading to chromosomal aberrations, but with a major role of NHEJ in all stages of cell cycle.  相似文献   

10.
Fos is an essential component of the mammalian UV response.   总被引:26,自引:5,他引:21       下载免费PDF全文
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11.
Survival and mutation to thioguanine resistance were measured in V79-4 hamster cells grown to plateau phase without refeeding and irradiated with 60Co gamma rays. The effects of low-dose-rate irradiation and of postirradiation holding on recovery from gamma-ray damage leading to these two responses were also studied. The responses of these plateau (extended G1)-phase cells to acute irradiation were similar to those we previously found for exponentially growing cells, including the linear relationship between induced mutant frequency and (log) surviving fraction. Irradiation at low dose rate (0.34 rad/min) considerably reduced both the lethal and mutagenic effects of given doses of gamma rays, but the linear mutation-survival relationship was approximately the same as for acute irradiation. In contrast, cells given a 5-hr holding period after acute irradiation showed the anticipated recovery from potentially lethal damage but no recovery from damage leading to mutation. These results are discussed in terms of previously proposed cellular repair processes (sublethal damage repair and potentially lethal damage repair) and the possibility that the radiation damage leading to lethality is different from mutagenic damage.  相似文献   

12.
Endoh D  Okui T  Kon Y  Hayashi M 《Radiation research》2001,155(2):320-327
The effects of X irradiation and hypertonic treatment with 0.5 M NaCl on the subcellular localization of the Ku proteins G22p1 (also known as Ku70) and Xrcc5 (also known as Ku80) in rat fibroblasts with normal radiosensitivity were examined using confocal laser microscopy and immunoblotting. Although these proteins were observed mainly in the nuclei of human fibroblasts, approximately 80% of the intensities of immunofluorescence from both G22p1 and Xrcc5 was observed in the cytoplasm of rat fibroblasts. When the rat cells were X-irradiated with 4 Gy, the intensities of the fluorescence derived from G22p1 and Xrcc5 in the nuclei increased from 20% to 50% of the total cellular fluorescence intensity at 20 min postirradiation. No significant differences were observed between the total intensities of the cellular fluorescence from the proteins in unirradiated and irradiated rat fibroblasts. The results showed that the proteins were translocated from the cytoplasm to the nucleus in the rat cells after X irradiation. The nuclear translocation of the proteins from the cytoplasm was inhibited by hypertonic treatment of the cells with 0.5 M NaCl for 20 min, which inhibits the fast repair process of potentially lethal damage (PLD). When the rat cells were treated with 0.5 M NaCl immediately after X irradiation, the repair of DNA DSBs was inhibited. The surviving fraction was approximately 60% of that of irradiated cells that were not treated with 0.5 M NaCl. The surviving fraction increased with incubation time in the growth medium before treatment with NaCl. The proportions of the intensities of fluorescence from G22p1 in the nuclei of X-irradiated cells also increased from 20% to 50% with increasing interval between X irradiation and treatment with NaCl. These results suggest that nuclear translocation of G22p1 and Xrcc5 is important for the fast repair process of PLD in rat cells.  相似文献   

13.
DNA-repair endonuclease activity in response to UV-induced DNA damage was quantified in diploid human fibroblasts after synchronizing cell cultures to selected stages of the cell cycle. Incubation of irradiated cells with aphidicolin, an inhibitor of DNA polymerases alpha and delta, delayed the sealing of repair patches and allowed estimation of rates of strand incision by the repair endonuclease. The apparent Vmax for endonucleolytic incision and Km for substrate utilization were determined by Lineweaver-Burk and Eadie-Hofstee analyses. For cells passing through G1, S or G2, Vmax for reparative incision was, respectively, 7.6, 8.4 and 8.4 breaks/10(10) Da per min, suggesting that there was little variation in incision activity during these cell-cycle phases. The Km values of 2.4-3.1 J/m2 for these cells indicate that the nucleotidyl DNA excision-repair pathway operates with maximal effectiveness after low fluences of UV that are in the shoulder region of survival curves. Fibroblasts in mitosis demonstrated a severe attenuation of reparative incision. Rates of incision were 11% of those seen in G2 cells. Disruption of nuclear structure during mitosis may reduce the effective concentration of endonuclease in the vicinity of damaged chromatin. The extreme condensation of chromatin during mitosis also may restrict the accessibility of reparative endonuclease to sites of DNA damage. Confluence-arrested fibroblasts in G0 expressed endonuclease activity with Vmax of 5.5 breaks/10(10) Da per min and a Km of 5.5 J/m2. The greater condensation of chromatin in quiescent cells may restrict the accessibility of endonuclease to dimers and so explain the elevated Km. When fibroblasts were synchronized by serum-deprivation, little variation in reparative endonuclease activity was discerned as released cells transited from early G1 through late G1 and early S. Proliferating fibroblasts in G1 were shown to express comparatively high numbers of reparative incision events in the absence of aphidicolin which was normally used to inhibit DNA polymerases and hold repair patches open. It was calculated that in G0, S and G2 phase cells, single-strand breaks at sites of repair remained open for 30, 19 and 14 sec, respectively. In G1 phase cells, repair sites remained open for 126 sec. Addition of deoxyribonucleosides to G1 cells reduced this time to 42 sec suggesting that the slower rate of synthesis and ligation of repair patches in G1 was due to a relative deficiency of deoxyribonucleotidyl precursors for DNA polymerase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
It is known that cells from one class of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patients, called XP variants, carry out excision repair of UV-induced DNA damage at a normal rate and are only slightly more sensitive than normal cells to the cytotoxic effect of UV radiation, but are much more sensitive to the mutagenic effect of UV. To see if this hypermutability were the result of an 'error-prone', excision repair process, we irradiated fibroblasts derived from an XP variant patient, XP4BE, under conditions that allowed the cells various lengths of time for excision repair before the onset of DNA synthesis (S phase) and assayed the frequency of 6-thioguanine (TG)-resistant mutants. Cells synchronized by release from confluence (G0 state) and irradiated just prior to S phase showed a dose-dependent increase in mutants at very high frequencies; cells irradiated in early G1, approximately 12 h before the onset of S phase, showed frequencies 4 times lower. Cells irradiated in the G0 state and allowed 24 h or 48 h for excision repair before the onset of S phase showed still lower frequencies. A comparison of the relative rates of decrease in mutant frequency with time for excision repair before the onset of S phase in XP variant cells and normal human fibroblasts after a dose of 4 or 6 J/m2 showed that these were equal. However, for every time point, the frequency of mutants induced per dose of UV was significantly higher in the XP variant population than in the normal, suggesting that the XP variant cells have an abnormally error-prone process of replicating DNA on a template containing unexcised lesions or normal cells are by-passing many of such lesions using an error-free process. A similar comparative study in synchronized populations of XP4BE cells and normal cells, using the anti 7,8-diol-9,10-epoxide of benzo[a]pyrene, showed that excision repair prior to the onset of S phase also decreased the frequency of mutants induced in XP variant cells by this agent. But for every dose and time point, the frequencies induced in XP4BE cells and normal cells were identical. Thus, the hypermutability of the XP4BE cells was specific to UV radiation-induced DNA lesions.  相似文献   

15.
Mouse embryo (C3H 10T1/2) cells were exposed to anisotonic NaCl solutions or combined treatments of radiation and anisotonic solutions. Anisotonic treatment with 0.05 or 0.5 mol/l solutions did not cause transformation and only prolonged exposure at 1.5 mol/l caused significant increases in transformation. When cells were irradiated in the presence of 0.05 mol/l NaCl, increased transformation occurred than when cells were irradiated in medium. Thus, anisotonic treatment after irradiation resulted in fixation of potentially lethal and transformed radiation damage. Fixation of potentially transformed damage was greater for cells irradiated in the presence of 0.05 mol/l NaCl than for cells irradiated in medium. When the NaCl treatment after irradiation was delayed by incubation at 37 degrees C, recovery of potentially lethal and potentially transformed damage was observed.  相似文献   

16.
Recovery from potentially lethal radiation damage in HeLa S3 cells has been studied by irradiating synchronous cultures with 4 Gy at selected ages in the cell cycle, initiating treatment with 4 mM caffeine, which prevents recovery, at progressively later times up to 24-30 h after irradiation, and determining the plateau level of survival after incubation with the caffeine until 36-40 h after mitotic collection. Cell recovery appears to begin immediately after irradiation at any time during interphase: an accelerating increase in survival gives way after several hours to a linear increase which lasts for an additional several hours. The median recovery time is approximately 13 h after irradiation at any time during G1, but is markedly shorter (5-7 h) after irradiation in S or G2. The rate of recovery is slightly depressed if DNA replication is inhibited with aphidicolin after irradiation and slightly enhanced if protein synthesis is inhibited with cycloheximide. Both the rate and the extent of recovery are dependent on the location of the cells in the cycle at the time of irradiation--both functions increasing with cell age from the beginning of S, but having different age dependencies in G1. Blocking cell progression with a DNA-synthesis inhibitor before irradiation halts the age-dependent changes.  相似文献   

17.
Using an asynchronously growing cell population, we investigated how X-irradiation at different stages of the cell cycle influences individual cell–based kinetics. To visualize the cell-cycle phase, we employed the fluorescent ubiquitination-based cell cycle indicator (Fucci). After 5 Gy irradiation, HeLa cells no longer entered M phase in an order determined by their previous stage of the cell cycle, primarily because green phase (S and G2) was less prolonged in cells irradiated during the red phase (G1) than in those irradiated during the green phase. Furthermore, prolongation of the green phase in cells irradiated during the red phase gradually increased as the irradiation timing approached late G1 phase. The results revealed that endoreduplication rarely occurs in this cell line under the conditions we studied. We next established a method for classifying the green phase into early S, mid S, late S, and G2 phases at the time of irradiation, and then attempted to estimate the duration of G2 arrest based on certain assumptions. The value was the largest when cells were irradiated in mid or late S phase and the smallest when they were irradiated in G1 phase. In this study, by closely following individual cells irradiated at different cell-cycle phases, we revealed for the first time the unique cell-cycle kinetics in HeLa cells that follow irradiation.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Recombination frequencies for two sets of genetic markers of herpes simplex virus were determined in various host cells with and without ultraviolet irradiation of the virus. UV irradiation increased the recombination frequency in all the cell types studied in direct proportion to the unrepaired lethal damage. In human skin fibroblasts derived from a patient with xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) of complementation group A, a given dose of UV stimulated recombination more than that in fibroblasts from normal individuals. On the other hand, UV stimulation of HSV recombination was slightly less than normal in fibroblasts derived from a patient with a variant form XP and from an ataxia telangiectasia patient. Caffeine, an agent known to inhibit repair of UV damage, reduced recombination in most of the cell types studied but did not suppress the UV-induced increase in recombination. These findings suggest that for virus DNA with the same number of unrepaired UV-lesions, each of the tested cell types promoted HSV-recombination to an equivalent extent.  相似文献   

19.
Temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of rat 3Y1 fibroblasts representing four separate complementation groups (3Y1tsD123, 3Y1tsF121, 3Y1tsG125, and 3Y1tsH203) are arrested mainly in the G1 phase when cells of randomly proliferating population at 33.8 degrees C are shifted to 39.8 degrees C (temperature arrest). We examined the time lag of the cellular entry into the S phase after release at 33.8 degrees C, both from the temperature arrest and from the arrest at 33.8 degrees C at a confluent cell density (density arrest). In the temperature-arrested cells, as the duration of temperature arrest increased, the time lag of entry into S phase after shift down to 33.8 degrees C was prolonged, in all four mutants. These observations suggest that the four different functional lesions, each causing arrest in the G1 phase, are also responsible for prolongation of the time lag of entry into the S phase in cells arrested in the G1 phase. The prolongation of the time lag in the temperature-arrested cultures was accelerated at a higher cell density, in medium supplemented with a lower concentration of serum, and at a higher restrictive temperature. In the density-arrested cells, as the duration of pre-exposure to 39.8 degrees C was increased, the time lag of entry into S phase at 33.8 degrees C after release from the arrest was drastically prolonged, in all four mutants. In 3Y1tsF121, 3Y1tsG125, and 3Y1tsH203, when the density-arrested cells were prestimulated by serum at 39.8 degrees C for various periods of time, the time lag of entry into S phase after release from the density arrest at 33.8 degrees C was initially shortened, and then, prolonged progressively as the period of prestimulation increased. These findings, taken together with other data, show that all four ts defects affect cells in states ranging from the deeper resting to mid- or late-G1 phase. It is suggested that events represented by these four mutants are required for entry into the S phase and normally operate in parallel but not in sequence in cells in states ranging from the deeper resting to the mid- or late-G1 phases, though they may affect each other.  相似文献   

20.
Zhu, W-G., Seno, J. D., Beck, B. D. and Dynlacht, J. R. Translocation of MRE11 from the Nucleus to the Cytoplasm as a Mechanism of Radiosensitization by Heat. Radiat. Res. 156, 95-102 (2001).Hyperthermia sensitizes mammalian cells to ionizing radiation, presumably by inhibiting the repair of radiation-induced double-strand breaks (DSBs). However, the mechanism by which heat inhibits DSB repair is unclear. The nuclear protein MRE11 is a component of a multi-protein complex involved in nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) of radiation-induced DSBs. Using one-dimensional sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting, we found that MRE11 is translocated from the nucleus to the cytoplasm when human U-1 melanoma or HeLa cells are heated for 15 min at 45.5 degrees C or when cells are heated after irradiation with 12 Gy of X rays. No such translocation is observed in unheated irradiated cells. The kinetics of migration of MRE11 to the cytoplasm was dependent upon whether the heated cells were irradiated, while the magnitude of redistribution of MRE11 was dependent upon post-treatment incubation time at 37 degrees C. Cytoplasmic MRE11 content reached a maximum 2-4 h after heating; the increase was not due to new protein synthesis. Partial recovery of nuclear MRE11 content was observed when heated cells or heated irradiated cells were incubated for up to 7 h at 37 degrees C after treatment. Western blotting results showing translocation of MRE11 from the nucleus to the cytoplasm after heating and irradiation were confirmed using confocal microscopy and immunofluorescence staining of fixed cells. Our data suggest that radiosensitization by heat may be caused, at least in part, by translocation of the DNA repair protein MRE11 from the nucleus to the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

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