| Literature DB >> 16091149 |
Jostein Dahle1, Egil Kvam, Trond Stokke.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Genomic instability is characteristic of many types of human cancer. Recently, we reported that ultraviolet radiation induced elevated mutation rates and chromosomal instability for many cell generations after ultraviolet irradiation. The increased mutation rates of unstable cells may allow them to accumulate aberrations that subsequently lead to cancer. Ultraviolet A radiation, which primarily acts by oxidative stress, and ultraviolet B radiation, which initially acts by absorption in DNA and direct damage to DNA, both produced genomically unstable cell clones. In this study, we have determined the effect of antioxidants on induction of delayed mutations by ultraviolet radiation. Delayed mutations are indicative of genomic instability.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16091149 PMCID: PMC1192812 DOI: 10.1186/1477-3163-4-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Carcinog ISSN: 1477-3163
Figure 1Lamp spectra. A) The UVA lamp has a peak at 375 nm. Total UVA- irradiance (320–400 nm) was 436 W/m2. B) The UVB lamp has a peak at 312 nm. Total UVB-irradiance (290–320 nm) was 23.3 W/m2.
Figure 2Effect of antioxidants on UVA- and UVB-induced early mutagenesis. Cells were exposed to 321 kJ/m2 UVA- (A) or 8.1 kJ/m2 UVB radiation (B). The cells were grown with or without antioxidants in ordinary medium for 8 days after ultraviolet irradiation. Subsequently, the cells were seeded in medium containing 5 μg/ml 6-thioguanine and no antioxidants. 0: medium without antioxidants, CAT: catalase, GSH: glutathione, SOD: superoxide dismutase. Error bars = standard error from 3–10 independent experiments each with 3–4 parallel dishes. *: significantly different from unirradiated cells (Mann-Whitney rank sum test, p < 0.05). ◆: significantly different from cells not treated with antioxidants (Mann-Whitney rank sum test, p < 0.05). Mutant frequency = number of mutant colonies per million cells seeded.
Clonogenic survival (%) of cells incubated with antioxidants after exposure to 321 kJ/m2 UVA- or 8.1 kJ/m2 UVB-radiation
| Antioxidant | Cells seeded before radiationa | Cells seeded 13 days after radiationa | ||
| UVA | UVB | UVA | UVB | |
| Noneb | 36 ± 12 | 33 ± 10 | 85 ± 7 | 80 ± 5 |
| Catalase | 21 ± 6 | 30 ± 5 | 84 ± 5 | 127 ± 12d |
| GSHc | 19 ± 8 | 41 ± 13 | 127 ± 15 | 163 ± 26d |
| SODc | 28 ± 6 | 29 ± 4 | 135 ± 12 | 105 ± 9 |
aMean values ± standard error from 3–10 independent experiments.
bThe cloning efficiency of unirradiated cells treated with antioxidants for 6 days after seeding were not significantly different from untreated cells.
cThe cloning efficiency for unirradiated cells treated with GSH or SOD for 13 days before seeding was significantly lower than for unirradiated cells not treated with antioxidants (t-test, p < 0.05).
dSignificantly higher survival than irradiated cells not treated with antioxidants (t-test, p < 0.05).
Figure 3Antioxidants inhibit UVA- and UVB-induced delayed mutagenesis. Cells were exposed to 321 kJ/m2 UVA- (A) or 8.1 kJ/m2 UVB radiation (B). The cells were grown with or without antioxidants in HAT-medium for 8 days after ultraviolet irradiation to kill early HPRT mutants. Subsequently, the cells were subcultured and grown with antioxidants in ordinary medium for 5 days before seeding in medium containing 5 μg/ml 6-thioguanine and no antioxidants. 0: medium without antioxidants, CAT: catalase, GSH: glutathione, SOD: superoxide dismutase. Error bars = standard error from 3–10 independent experiments each with 3–4 parallel dishes. *: significantly different from unirradiated cells (Mann-Whitney rank sum test, p < 0.05). Mutant frequency = number of mutant colonies per million cells seeded.