Literature DB >> 19506344

Two major factors involved in the reverse dose-rate effect for somatic mutation induction are the cell cycle position and LET value.

Hiroshi Tauchi1, Hiroyuki Waku, Eigo Matsumoto, Sayaka Yara, Shino Okumura, Yoshiyuki Iwata, Kenshi Komatsu, Yoshiya Furusawa, Kiyomi Eguchi-Kasai, Akira Tachibana.   

Abstract

To study mechanisms which could be involved in the reverse dose rate effect observed during mutation induction after exposure to high LET radiation, synchronized mouse L5178Y cells were exposed to carbon 290 MeV/n beams with different LET values at the G2/M, G1, G1/S or S phases in the cell cycle. The frequency of Hprt-deficient (6-thioguanine-resistant) mutant induction was subsequently determined. The results showed that after exposure to high LET value radiation (50.8 and 76.5 keV/microm), maximum mutation frequencies were seen at the G2/M phase, but after exposure to lower LET radiation (13.3 keV/microm), the highest mutation frequencies were observed at the G1 phase. The higher LET beam always produced higher mutation frequencies in the G2/M phase than in the G1 phase, regardless of radiation dose. These results suggest that cells in the G2/M phase is hyper-sensitive for mutation induction from high LET radiation, but not to mutation induction from low LET radiation. Molecular analysis of mutation spectra showed that large deletions (which could include almost entire exons) of the mouse Hprt gene were most efficiently induced in G2/M cells irradiated with high LET radiation. These entire exon deletions were not as frequent in cells exposed to lower LET radiation. This suggests that inappropriate recombination repair might have occurred in response to condensed damage in condensed chromatin in the G2/M phase. In addition, by using a hyper-sensitive mutation detection system (GM06318-10 cells), a reverse dose-rate effect was clearly observed after exposure to carbon beams with higher LET values (66 keV/microm), but not after exposure to beams with lower LET values (13.3 keV/microm). Thus, G2/M sensitivity towards mutation induction, and the dependence on radiation LET values could both be major factors involved in the reverse dose rate effect produced by high LET radiation.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19506344     DOI: 10.1269/jrr.09033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Radiat Res        ISSN: 0449-3060            Impact factor:   2.724


  2 in total

1.  Genetic Analysis of T Cell Lymphomas in Carbon Ion-Irradiated Mice Reveals Frequent Interstitial Chromosome Deletions: Implications for Second Cancer Induction in Normal Tissues during Carbon Ion Radiotherapy.

Authors:  Benjamin J Blyth; Shizuko Kakinuma; Masaaki Sunaoshi; Yoshiko Amasaki; Shinobu Hirano-Sakairi; Kanae Ogawa; Ayana Shirakami; Yi Shang; Chizuru Tsuruoka; Mayumi Nishimura; Yoshiya Shimada
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-06-30       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Mutations in the FHA-domain of ectopically expressed NBS1 lead to radiosensitization and to no increase in somatic mutation rates via a partial suppression of homologous recombination.

Authors:  Maki Ohara; Yumi Funyu; Shunsuke Ebara; Yuki Sakamoto; Ryota Seki; Kenta Iijima; Akiko Ohishi; Junya Kobayashi; Kenshi Komatsu; Akira Tachibana; Hiroshi Tauchi
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2014-03-09       Impact factor: 2.724

  2 in total

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