Dose protraction studies with low- and high-LET radiations on neoplastic cell transformation in vitro
- PMID: 11537213
- DOI: 10.1016/0273-1177(86)90286-3
Dose protraction studies with low- and high-LET radiations on neoplastic cell transformation in vitro
Abstract
A major objective of our heavy-ion research is to understand the potential carcinogenic effects of cosmic rays and the mechanisms of radiation-induced cell transformation. During the past several years, we have studied the relative biological effectiveness of heavy ions with various atomic numbers and linear energy transfer on neoplastic cell transformation and the repair of transformation lesions induced by heavy ions in mammalian cells. All of these studies, however, were done with a high dose rate. For risk assessment, it is extremely important to have data on the low-dose-rate effect of heavy ions. Recently, with confluent cultures of the C3H10T1/2 cell line, we have initiated some studies on the low-dose-rate effect of low- and high-LET radiation on cell transformation. For low-LET photons, there was a decrease in cell killing and cell transformation frequency when cells were irradiated with fractionated doses and at low dose rate. Cultured mammalian cells can repair both subtransformation and potential transformation lesions induced by X rays. The kinetics of potential transformation damage repair is a slow one. No sparing effect, however, was found for high-LET radiation. There was an enhancement of cell transformation for low-dose-rate argon (400 MeV/u; 120 keV/micrometer) and iron particles (600 MeV/u; 200 keV/micrometer). The molecular mechanisms for the enhancement effect is unknown at present.
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