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THE EFFECT OF IRRADIATED PLASMA ON NORMAL HUMAN CHROMOSOMES AND ITS RELEVANCE TO THE LONG-LIVED LYMPHOCYTE HYPOTHESIS
Authors:David  Scott
Affiliation:Laboratory of Radiobiology, University of California Medical Center, San Francisco
Abstract:The persistence of unstable chromosome-type aberrations in peripheral blood lymphocytes of irradiated individuals has led to the proposal that some lymphocytes survive for many years in vivo without undergoing mitosis (Fitzgerald, 1964). It has recently been shown, however, that plasma from irradiated individuals can induce chromosomal damage in cultures of normal blood lymphocytes (Hollowell & Littlefield, 1968) even when the plasma donors were irradiated 7 years earlier (Goh & Sumner, 1968). Goh (1968) has therefore suggested that ‘An alternate explanation to the “long-lived cell” theory proposed by others…would be that a substance is produced or activated by total body irradiation and remains capable of affecting the chromosomes for extensive lengths of time'. The present results show that a lymphocyte chromosome-breaking factor can be induced in the plasma of blood irradiated in vitro as well as in vivo. All of the aberrations induced by this ‘plasma factor’and those reported by other workers can be interpreted as being of the chromatid type. Before the long-lived lymphocyte hypothesis can be brought into serious disrepute, it must be shown that the plasma factor can induce aberrations of the same type as persist after in vivo irradiation (i.e. unequivocal chromosome-type aberrations, such as dicentrics and rings) and that these can be induced in vivo.
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