Concepedia

Abstract

Modern technologies have provided the opportunity to monitor mutations in people in vivo. The subjects of this study were accidentally exposed to 137Cesium in a radiological accident that occurred in September 1987 in Goiânia, Brazil, during which more than 150 people received doses greater than 0.1 Gy and as high as 7 Gy. The objective of this study was to determine how long the hprt mutant T-cells in the peripheral blood contribute to mutant frequency by examining the time-course of the T-lymphocyte response to ionizing radiation. This report describes the results obtained over a period of 2.3 to 4.5 years subsequent to the accident, from 11 subjects with doses ranging from 1 to 7 Gy, and from nine control subjects selected from the same population. The mean ln MF (±SE) of the control group was 2.5 (±0.2) + ln 10−6. The exposed group had a significantly increased mutant frequency; the mean In MF (± SE) were 3.3 (±0.3) + ln 10−6, 2.8 (±0.2) + ln 10−6, and 2.3 (±0.2) + ln 10 −6, in the years 1990–1992 respectively. Based on the decline of mutant frequency and using Buckton's models [Buckton et al. (1967): Nature 214:470–473], we demonstrated that mutant T-cells have a short-term memory with a half-life of 2.1 years. This relatively short half-life limits the effective use of the hprt assay as the method of choice to monitor past exposure. The data also demonstrate a positive correlation with age, and an inverse correlation with plating efficiency. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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