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Effects of irradiation on intestinal cells in vivo and in vitro
Authors:Wróblewski R  Jalnäs M  Van Decker G  Björk J  Wroblewski J  Roomans G M
Institution:Department of Medical Cell Biology, University of Uppsala, Sweden. romuald.wroblewski@medcellbiol.uu.se
Abstract:The effects of irradiation on intestinal epithelial cells were analyzed in vivo and in vitro. The in vivo study was carried out on the rat small intestine and for the in vitro study the intestinal crypt cell-line IEC-6 was used. Rat intestine and IEC-6 cells were irradiated with X-ray doses ranging between 1-16 Gy. Energy-dispersive X-ray microanalysis was used for detection of the elemental changes in the cells. Cell morphology was investigated in the scanning electron microscope, DNA-synthesis by autoradiography of 3H-thymidine incorporating nuclei and proliferation by cell counting. Our results indicate that in vivo, in the crypt cells, the increasing doses of irradiation led to increased sodium and lowered potassium and phosphorus concentrations. Corresponding ion shifts were found in the irradiated IEC-6 cells. Cells continued to proliferate up to the dose of 8 Gy, although the proliferation rate became lower with increasing dose of irradiation. The increasing dose of irradiation significantly reduced DNA-synthesis (16 Gy decreased DNA-synthesis by 50%) which resulted in a complete inhibition of cell proliferation. Analysis of goblet cells also showed characteristic radiation-dependent elemental changes. Scanning electron microscopical investigation of cells in culture revealed that most of the control cells were flat and had rather smooth cell membranes. Irradiation led to the appearance of numerous different membrane manifestations (microvilli of varying length and distribution, and blebs). Frequency of differences in the topology of the cells was related to the dose of irradiation. Our study clearly demonstrates that even low doses of irradiation cause changes in the ionic composition of the cells and inhibit DNA-synthesis and cell proliferation. The effects observed in the crypt cells in vivo were the same as in the intestinal cell line in vitro, which indicates that IEC-6 cells can be used for investigation of side effects of radiation to the abdomen.
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