Publication | Open Access
No Induction of p53 Phosphorylation and Few Focus Formation of Phosphorylated H2AX Suggest Efficient Repair of DNA Damage During Chronic Low-dose-rate Irradiation in Human Cells
53
Citations
11
References
2004
Year
Dna DamageRadiation EffectRadiation ExposureMolecular BiologyCell DeathP53 PhosphorylationEpigeneticsP53 ActivationChronic IrradiationRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineCancer ResearchGenome InstabilityFew Focus FormationDna ReplicationRadiation EffectsHtert GeneCell BiologyChromatinNatural SciencesPhotocarcinogenesisMedicine
Human fibroblast cells obtained from a normal individual and immortalized by introduction of the hTERT gene were irradiated with 0 to 5 Gy of acute high-dose-rate radiation (1.8 Gy/min) or chronic low-dose-rate radiation (0.3 mGy/min) in the G0 phase, and p53 activation was studied. After high-dose-rate irradiation, a dose-dependent induction of Ser15 phosphorylation was observed, whereas after low-dose-rate irradiation almost none was observed. Then we analyzed the focus formation of phosphorylated histone H2AX protein, which is closely correlated with the induction of double-strand breaks. High-dose-rate radiation induced a significant number of foci in a dose-dependent manner, whereas, low-dose-rate radiation could induce only a few foci even at the highest dose. These results strongly suggest that DNA damage induced by low-dose-rate radiation such as a double-strand break is efficiently repaired during chronic irradiation.
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