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. 2000 May 15;60(10):2623-31.

High and low fluences of alpha-particles induce a G1 checkpoint in human diploid fibroblasts

Affiliations
  • PMID: 10825133

High and low fluences of alpha-particles induce a G1 checkpoint in human diploid fibroblasts

E I Azzam et al. Cancer Res. .

Abstract

The effects of exposure to high and very low fluence alpha-particles on the G1 checkpoint were investigated in human diploid fibroblasts irradiated and released from density-inhibited confluent cultures by the use of the cumulative labeling index method. Transient and permanent arrests in G1 occurred in fibroblast populations exposed to mean doses as low as 1 cGy, suggesting that nontraversed bystander cells may contribute to the low dose response. In cells exposed to high fluences, the G1 checkpoint is at least as extensive as in gamma-irradiated cells. In contrast to gamma-irradiated cells, neither repair of potentially lethal damage nor a reduction in the fraction of cells transiently or permanently arrested in G1 were observed in cells held in confluence for 6 h after alpha-particle irradiation. Studies with isogenic wild-type, p53-/-, and p21Waf1-/- mouse embryo fibroblasts exposed to either gamma or alpha-particle radiation revealed a total lack of G1 arrest in either p53-/- or p21waf1-/- cells, indicating that the G1 checkpoint in wild-type cells is p53-dependent and that p21Wf1 fully mediates the role of p53 in its induction. In contrast to human cells, mouse embryo fibroblasts do not undergo a permanent G1 arrest. Except under conditions favoring potentially lethal damage repair, a comparable expression pattern of p53, p21Waf1, and other cell cycle-regulated proteins (pRb, p34cdc2, and cyclin B1) was observed in alpha-particle or gamma-irradiated human fibroblasts.

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