| Literature DB >> 6472316 |
B V Bronk, E H Humphries, C S Rupert.
Abstract
A survival assay with chick-embryo fibroblasts was used to study photoreactivation of ultraviolet (UV) irradiation-induced damage. The kinetics of the photoreactivation was studied as a function of the length of a post UV dark incubation period of from 0 to 18 h at 38.5 degrees C. The logarithmic survival curve with no photoreactivation had a Do of about 4.3 J/m2 giving approximately 0.8% relative plating efficiency after a UV dose of 21 J/m2. At this dose the efficiency of photoreactivation (survival increase per unit blacklight dose) increased with post UV incubation time reaching a maximum at 4-6 h, then declining until there was little photoreactivation observed for times longer than about 11 h. The possibility that this effect was produced by pre-UV perturbations of the cell cycle was eliminated by the fact that the same results were achieved after several rather different trypsinization protocols. The shape of the photoreactivation vs. blacklight curve at the time of peak efficiency showed a threshold up to about 3 kJ/m2, a rising portion and a plateau after 12-16 kJ/m2 when the survival increased by a factor of roughly 8.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1984 PMID: 6472316 DOI: 10.1016/0167-8817(84)90064-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mutat Res ISSN: 0027-5107 Impact factor: 2.433