Literature DB >> 10929379

A polymer, random walk model for the size-distribution of large DNA fragments after high linear energy transfer radiation.

A L Ponomarev1, D Brenner, L R Hlatky, R K Sachs.   

Abstract

DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) produced by densely ionizing radiation are not located randomly in the genome: recent data indicate DSB clustering along chromosomes. Stochastic DSB clustering at large scales, from > 100 Mbp down to < 0.01 Mbp, is modeled using computer simulations and analytic equations. A random-walk, coarse-grained polymer model for chromatin is combined with a simple track structure model in Monte Carlo software called DNAbreak and is applied to data on alpha-particle irradiation of V-79 cells. The chromatin model neglects molecular details but systematically incorporates an increase in average spatial separation between two DNA loci as the number of base-pairs between the loci increases. Fragment-size distributions obtained using DNAbreak match data on large fragments about as well as distributions previously obtained with a less mechanistic approach. Dose-response relations, linear at small doses of high linear energy transfer (LET) radiation, are obtained. They are found to be non-linear when the dose becomes so large that there is a significant probability of overlapping or close juxtaposition, along one chromosome, for different DSB clusters from different tracks. The non-linearity is more evident for large fragments than for small. The DNAbreak results furnish an example of the RLC (randomly located clusters) analytic formalism, which generalizes the broken-stick fragment-size distribution of the random-breakage model that is often applied to low-LET data.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10929379     DOI: 10.1007/s004119900040

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Environ Biophys        ISSN: 0301-634X            Impact factor:   1.925


  3 in total

1.  In vivo space radiation-induced non-targeted responses: late effects on molecular signaling in mitochondria.

Authors:  Mohit R Jain; Min Li; Wei Chen; Tong Liu; Sonia M de Toledo; Badri N Pandey; Hong Li; Bernard M Rabin; Edouard I Azzam
Journal:  Curr Mol Pharmacol       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 3.339

2.  Genome3D: a viewer-model framework for integrating and visualizing multi-scale epigenomic information within a three-dimensional genome.

Authors:  Thomas M Asbury; Matt Mitman; Jijun Tang; W Jim Zheng
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2010-09-02       Impact factor: 3.169

3.  Image-based modeling reveals dynamic redistribution of DNA damage into nuclear sub-domains.

Authors:  Sylvain V Costes; Artem Ponomarev; James L Chen; David Nguyen; Francis A Cucinotta; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2007-08       Impact factor: 4.475

  3 in total

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