Publication | Closed Access
The Radiosensitizing Actions of Ketonic Agents and Oxygen in Bacterial Spores Suspended in Aqueous and Non‐Aqueous Milieux
52
Citations
10
References
1972
Year
EngineeringRadiation EffectChemistryDried SporesEnvironmental ChemistryExtremophilePhototoxicityToxicologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyRadiation ChemistryO 2BiochemistryPhotochemistryEcotoxicologyDisinfectantRadiation ApplicationKetonic AgentsNon‐aqueous MilieuxEnvironmental EngineeringMicrobiologyMedicineBacterial Spores Suspended
Abstract Increasing concentrations of the ketonic agents, diacetyl, acetone, acetophenone and p‐nitroacetophenone, cause regular increases in the radiosensitivity of aqueous anoxic spores to an extent that is some 40% of that achieved by O 2 alone; no effect on radiosensitivity is observed with agents in the presence of O 2 . The effectiveness of these agents and O 2 as radiosensitizers ranks on a molar basis in the same order as that of their electron affinities, indicating that their modes of action are in some way associated with radiation‐induced electrons. A lack of radiosensitizing action of diacetyl and p‐nitroacetophenone in dried spores and of p‐nitroacetophenone in suspensions of spores in non‐aqueous liquids supports the notion that the origin of their actions is within the water inside the cell.
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