| Literature DB >> 29997637 |
Abstract
Understanding the effects of ionizing radiation (IR) on plants is important for environmental protection, for agriculture and horticulture, and for space science but plants have significant biological differences to the animals from which much relevant knowledge is derived. The effects of IR on plants are understood best at acute high doses because there have been; (a) controlled experiments in the field using point sources, (b) field studies in the immediate aftermath of nuclear accidents, and (c) controlled laboratory experiments. A compilation of studies of the effects of IR on plants reveals that although there are numerous field studies of the effects of chronic low doses on plants, there are few controlled experiments that used chronic low doses. Using the Bradford-Hill criteria widely used in epidemiological studies we suggest that a new phase of chronic low-level radiation research on plants is desirable if its effects are to be properly elucidated. We emphasize the plant biological contexts that should direct such research. We review previously reported effects from the molecular to community level and, using a plant stress biology context, discuss a variety of acute high- and chronic low-dose data against Derived Consideration Reference Levels (DCRLs) used for environmental protection. We suggest that chronic low-level IR can sometimes have effects at the molecular and cytogenetic level at DCRL dose rates (and perhaps below) but that there are unlikely to be environmentally significant effects at higher levels of biological organization. We conclude that, although current data meets only some of the Bradford-Hill criteria, current DCRLs for plants are very likely to be appropriate at biological scales relevant to environmental protection (and for which they were intended) but that research designed with an appropriate biological context and with more of the Bradford-Hill criteria in mind would strengthen this assertion. We note that the effects of IR have been investigated on only a small proportion of plant species and that research with a wider range of species might improve not only the understanding of the biological effects of radiation but also that of the response of plants to environmental stress.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage; environmental protection; ionising radiation; oxidative stress; plant stress; radiobiology
Year: 2018 PMID: 29997637 PMCID: PMC6028737 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2018.00847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Preliminary assessment of data for observed effects on plants being caused by chronic low doses of ionizing radiation (IR) at about derived consideration reference level (DCRL) dose rates using the Bradford-Hill criteria.
| Criterion | Preliminary assessment of data for effects of chronic low doses of IR in plants |
|---|---|
| l Strength | Several studies report statistical significance but the association between IR and effects is generally not strong. Use of meta-analysis to reveal effects indicate that they are weak. Possibility of selection bias in reporting of effects has not been analyzed. |
| 2 Consistency | Different studies, different research groups, and research at different sites often produce conflicting evidence. Few studies have been repeated at the same sites. Truly blind studies reported. |
| 3 Specificity | There is frequently the possibility of covariables in studies so effects cannot be securely ascribed to IR. In almost all instances ‘high’ dose rate sites vary in history of dose or in current environmental variables. |
| 4 Temporality | There are few studies that describe endpoints before and after contamination so the relationship between the onset of elevated dose and effects is poorly known. |
| 5 Dose-response | Some evidence for a dose-response but much debate about the relationship at chronic low doses. |
| 6 Plausibility | DNA damage and repair well understood but cause of damage at low chronic doses unclear. Physiological explanations that effects are due to oxidative stress are implausible. |
| 7 Coherence | The understanding of effects at different levels of biological understanding is not yet coherent. |
| 8 Experimental | There is almost no experimental evidence derived under properly controlled conditions of effects of IR at chronic low doses over generations, years or decades. |
| 9 Analogy | The actions of agents with similar effects, e.g., UV or ozone, at comparable exposures do not accord with purported effects of IR at chronic low doses. |