Literature DB >> 11121218

Children of chernobyl cleanup workers do not show elevated rates of mutations in minisatellite alleles.

L A Livshits1, S G Malyarchuk, S A Kravchenko, G H Matsuka, E M Lukyanova, Y G Antipkin, L P Arabskaya, E Petit, F Giraudeau, P Gourmelon, G Vergnaud.   

Abstract

The disaster at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in April 1986 was accompanied by the release of large amounts of radioisotopes, resulting in the contamination of extensive regions of the Ukraine, Byelorus and the Russian Federation. Cleanup workers (liquidators) and people living on land contaminated with radioactive materials were most exposed. To assess the genetic effects of exposure to ionizing radiation after the Chernobyl accident, we have measured the frequency of inherited mutant alleles at seven hypermutable minisatellite loci in 183 children born to Chernobyl cleanup workers (liquidators) and 163 children born to control families living in nonirradiated areas of the Ukraine. There was no significant difference in the frequency of inherited mutant alleles between the exposed and control groups. The exposed group was then divided into two subgroups according to the time at which the children were conceived with respect to the fathers' work at the power plant. Eighty-eight children were conceived either while their fathers were working at the facility or up to 2 months later (Subgroup 1). The other 95 children were conceived at least 4 months after their fathers had stopped working at the Chernobyl site (Subgroup 2). The frequencies of mutant alleles were higher for the majority of loci (i.e. 1.44 times higher for CEB1) in Subgroup 1 than in Subgroup 2. This result, if confirmed, would reconcile the apparently conflicting results obtained in the chronically exposed Byelorus population and the Hiroshima-Nagasaki A-bomb survivors.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11121218     DOI: 10.1667/0033-7587(2001)155[0074:coccwd]2.0.co;2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Res        ISSN: 0033-7587            Impact factor:   2.841


  10 in total

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Journal:  Int J Radiat Biol       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 2.694

2.  Interspecies diversity of the genome responses to chronic irradiation in natural populations of rodents.

Authors:  E A Gileva; V N Bol'shakov; L E Yalkovskaya
Journal:  Dokl Biol Sci       Date:  2002 Nov-Dec

3.  Sidestream tobacco smoke is a male germ cell mutagen.

Authors:  Francesco Marchetti; Andrea Rowan-Carroll; Andrew Williams; Aris Polyzos; M Lynn Berndt-Weis; Carole L Yauk
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-07-18       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Germline minisatellite mutations in survivors of childhood and young adult cancer treated with radiation.

Authors:  E Janet Tawn; Gwen S Rees; Cheryl Leith; Jeanette F Winther; Gillian B Curwen; Marilyn Stovall; Jørgen H Olsen; Catherine Rechnitzer; Henrik Schroeder; Per Guldberg; John D Boice
Journal:  Int J Radiat Biol       Date:  2010-11-19       Impact factor: 2.694

5.  Lack of transgenerational effects of ionizing radiation exposure from the Chernobyl accident.

Authors:  Meredith Yeager; Mitchell J Machiela; Prachi Kothiyal; Michael Dean; Clara Bodelon; Shalabh Suman; Mingyi Wang; Lisa Mirabello; Chase W Nelson; Weiyin Zhou; Cameron Palmer; Bari Ballew; Leandro M Colli; Neal D Freedman; Casey Dagnall; Amy Hutchinson; Vibha Vij; Yosi Maruvka; Maureen Hatch; Iryna Illienko; Yuri Belayev; Nori Nakamura; Vadim Chumak; Elena Bakhanova; David Belyi; Victor Kryuchkov; Ivan Golovanov; Natalia Gudzenko; Elizabeth K Cahoon; Paul Albert; Vladimir Drozdovitch; Mark P Little; Kiyohiko Mabuchi; Chip Stewart; Gad Getz; Dimitry Bazyka; Amy Berrington de Gonzalez; Stephen J Chanock
Journal:  Science       Date:  2021-04-22       Impact factor: 63.714

6.  The chernobyl accident 20 years on: an assessment of the health consequences and the international response.

Authors:  Keith Baverstock; Dillwyn Williams
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 9.031

Review 7.  Mutation Induction in Humans and Mice: Where Are We Now?

Authors:  Yuri Dubrova
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2019-11-01       Impact factor: 6.639

8.  Chronic radiation exposure at Chernobyl shows no effect on genetic diversity in the freshwater crustacean, Asellus aquaticus thirty years on.

Authors:  Neil Fuller; Alex T Ford; Adélaïde Lerebours; Dmitri I Gudkov; Liubov L Nagorskaya; Jim T Smith
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-08-24       Impact factor: 2.912

9.  Fukushima simulation experiment: assessing the effects of chronic low-dose-rate internal 137Cs radiation exposure on litter size, sex ratio, and biokinetics in mice.

Authors:  Hiroo Nakajima; Yoshiaki Yamaguchi; Takashi Yoshimura; Manabu Fukumoto; Takeshi Todo
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 2.724

10.  Multisite de novo mutations in human offspring after paternal exposure to ionizing radiation.

Authors:  Manuel Holtgrewe; Alexej Knaus; Gabriele Hildebrand; Jean-Tori Pantel; Miguel Rodriguez de Los Santos; Kornelia Neveling; Jakob Goldmann; Max Schubach; Marten Jäger; Marie Coutelier; Stefan Mundlos; Dieter Beule; Karl Sperling; Peter Michael Krawitz
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-10-02       Impact factor: 4.379

  10 in total

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