| Literature DB >> 1672354 |
K Kobayashi1, K Hieda, H Maezawa, Y Furusawa, M Suzuki, T Ito.
Abstract
The effects of K-shell absorption of phosphorus atoms on yeast cells were investigated using synchrotron X-rays that were tuned to the resonance absorption peak (2153 eV). Three types of cellular effect (cell inactivation, induction of gene conversion at the trp-5 locus, and cell membrane impairment (changes in the permeability] were measured. It was demonstrated that the enhancement factor was 1.4 at the resonance peak regarding both lethality and the induction of gene conversion in reference of off-peak irradiation (2146 and 2160 eV). No difference was found between the two off-peak irradiation energies. No cell membrane impairment was detected, irrespective of the X-ray photon energies employed within the fluence range tested. These results strongly suggest that K-shell X-ray absorption in the resonance mode by cellular phosphorus atoms causes significantly more cellular effects than the off-resonance mode of absorption, probably via some specific changes induced in the phosphates of the DNA strand. Calculations using the number of phosphorus atoms in a defined size of the trp locus (2127 base pairs) on the DNA and the absorption cross-section of the resonance mode of phosphorus showed that gene conversion is inducible at a rate of 0.13 per X-ray photon absorption per locus. These results are discussed regarding the modes of K-shell photoabsorption.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1672354 DOI: 10.1080/09553009114550571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Radiat Biol ISSN: 0955-3002 Impact factor: 2.694