Recovery from potentially lethal damage and recruitment time of noncycling clonogenic cells in 9L confluent monolayers and spheroids
- PMID: 3375440
Recovery from potentially lethal damage and recruitment time of noncycling clonogenic cells in 9L confluent monolayers and spheroids
Abstract
Cells that have been grown as multicell tumor spheroids exhibit radioresistance compared to the same cells grown in monolayers. Comparison of potentially lethal damage (PLD) repair and its kinetics was made between 9L cells grown as spheroids and confluent monolayers. Survival curves of cells plated immediately after irradiation showed the typical radioresistance associated with spheroid culture compared to plateau-phase monolayers. The dose-modification factor for spheroid cell survival is 1.44. Postirradiation incubations in normal phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), conditioned media, or 0.5 M NaCl in PBS reduced the differences in radiosensitivity between the two culture conditions. Postirradiation treatment in PBS or conditioned medium promoted repair of potentially lethal damage, and 0.5 M NaCl prevented the removal of PLD and allowed the fixation of damage resulting in lower survival. Survival of spheroid and monolayer cells after hypertonic NaCl treatment was identical. NaCl treatment reduced Do more than it did the shoulder (Dq) of the survival curve. PLD repair kinetics measured after postirradiation incubation in PBS followed by hypertonic NaCl treatment was the same for spheroids and for plateau-phase monolayers. The kinetics of PLD repair indicates a biphasic phenomenon. There is an initial fast component with a repair half-time of 7.9 min and a slow component with a repair half-time of 56.6 min. Most of the damage (59%) is repaired slowly. Since the repair capacity and kinetics are the same for spheroids and monolayers, the radioresistance of spheroids cannot be explained on this basis. Evidence indicates that the time to return from a Go (noncycling G1 cells) state to a proliferative state (recruitment) for cells from confluent monolayers and from spheroids after dissociation by protease treatment may be the most important determinant of the degree of PLD repair that occurs. Growth curves and flow cytometry cell cycle analysis indicate that spheroid cells have a lag period for reentry into a proliferative state. Since plating efficiency remains high and unchanging during this period, one cannot account for the delay on the basis of the existence of a large fraction of Go cells which are not potentially clonogenic. The cell cycle progression begins in 6-8 h for monolayer cells and in 14-15 h for spheroids. It is hypothesized that the slower reentry of spheroid cells into a cycling phase allows more time for repair than for the rapidly proliferating monolayer cells.
Similar articles
-
Detection of X-ray damage repair by the immediate versus delayed plating technique is dependent on cell shape and cell concentration.Scanning Microsc. 1992 Jun;6(2):543-55; discussion 556-9. Scanning Microsc. 1992. PMID: 1462139
-
Differential repair of potentially lethal damage in exponentially growing and quiescent 9L cells.Radiat Res. 1990 Apr;122(1):38-43. Radiat Res. 1990. PMID: 2320724
-
Tests of the double-strand break, lethal-potentially lethal and repair-misrepair models for mammalian cell survival using data for survival as a function of delayed-plating interval for log-phase Chinese hamster V79 cells.Radiat Res. 1997 Sep;148(3):285-92. Radiat Res. 1997. PMID: 9291360
-
Multicellular tumor spheroids in radiotherapy research (review).Anticancer Res. 1990 Jul-Aug;10(4):963-9. Anticancer Res. 1990. PMID: 2200335 Review.
-
Importance of cell proliferative state and potentially lethal damage repair on radiation effectiveness: implications for combined tumor treatments (review).Int J Oncol. 2001 Aug;19(2):247-56. doi: 10.3892/ijo.19.2.247. Int J Oncol. 2001. PMID: 11445835 Review.
Cited by
-
Modeling the biological response of normal human cells, including repair processes, to fractionated carbon beam irradiation.J Radiat Res. 2013 Sep;54(5):798-807. doi: 10.1093/jrr/rrt012. Epub 2013 Feb 28. J Radiat Res. 2013. PMID: 23449640 Free PMC article.
-
Prognostic values of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and Ki-67 for radiotherapy of oesophageal squamous cell carcinomas.Br J Cancer. 1999 May;80(3-4):387-95. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6690368. Br J Cancer. 1999. PMID: 10408843 Free PMC article. Clinical Trial.
-
Higher relative biological efficiency of alpha-particles: in vitro veritas, in vivo vanitas?Eur J Nucl Med. 2001 Jul;28(7):939-40. doi: 10.1007/s002590100569. Eur J Nucl Med. 2001. PMID: 11504094 No abstract available.