| Literature DB >> 11873496 |
Albert J Fornace1, Sally A Amundson, Khanh T Do, Paul Meltzer, Jeffrey Trent, Michael Bittner.
Abstract
Using a human myeloid tumor cell line (ML-1), we detected induction of mRNA expression of several stress-responsive genes by doses of gamma rays as low as 2 cGy. For instance, the dose response for induction of CIP1/WAF1 and GADD45 appears to be linear over the range of 2 to 50 cGy and shows no evidence of a threshold for induction. Although 2 and 5 cGy exposures did not result in any detectable reduction in cloning efficiency nor in increased apoptosis in ML-1 cells, these exposures did produce a brief cell-cycle delay. We also used fluorescent cDNA microarray hybridization to investigate transcriptional stress responses following low doses of gamma rays and to identify additional radiation-responsive genes for inclusion in a stress-specific microarray we are developing. These studies provide insight into the molecular responses to physiologically relevant doses, which cannot necessarily be extrapolated from high-dose studies. The use of high throughput arrays will allow the identification of multiple stress-responsive genes that are radiation inducible in a variety of cell types and tissues. The expectation is that transcriptional stress responses will provide a molecular approach to monitoring for radiation exposure and detecting interindividual differences.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 11873496
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mil Med ISSN: 0026-4075 Impact factor: 1.437