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Frozen human cells can record radiation damage accumulated during space flight: mutation induction and radioadaptation
Authors:Fumio Yatagai  Masamitsu Honma  Akihisa Takahashi  Katsunori Omori  Hiromi Suzuki  Toru Shimazu  Masaya Seki  Toko Hashizume  Akiko Ukai  Kaoru Sugasawa  Tomoko Abe  Naoshi Dohmae  Shuichi Enomoto  Takeo Ohnishi  Alasdair Gordon  Noriaki Ishioka
Affiliation:The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (RIKEN), Saitama, 351-0198, Japan. yatagai@riken.jp
Abstract:To estimate the space-radiation effects separately from other space-environmental effects such as microgravity, frozen human lymphoblastoid TK6 cells were sent to the "Kibo" module of the International Space Station (ISS), preserved under frozen condition during the mission and finally recovered to Earth (after a total of 134 days flight, 72 mSv). Biological assays were performed on the cells recovered to Earth. We observed a tendency of increase (2.3-fold) in thymidine kinase deficient (TK(-)) mutations over the ground control. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) analysis on the mutants also demonstrated a tendency of increase in proportion of the large deletion (beyond the TK locus) events, 6/41 in the in-flight samples and 1/17 in the ground control. Furthermore, in-flight samples exhibited 48% of the ground-control level in TK(-) mutation frequency upon exposure to a subsequent 2 Gy dose of X-rays, suggesting a tendency of radioadaptation when compared with the ground-control samples. The tendency of radioadaptation was also supported by the post-flight assays on DNA double-strand break repair: a 1.8- and 1.7-fold higher efficiency of in-flight samples compared to ground control via non-homologous end-joining and homologous recombination, respectively. These observations suggest that this system can be used as a biodosimeter, because DNA damage generated by space radiation is considered to be accumulated in the cells preserved frozen during the mission, Furthermore, this system is also suggested to be applicable for evaluating various cellular responses to low-dose space radiation, providing a better understanding of biological space-radiation effects as well as estimation of health influences of future space explores.
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