4.4 Article

Dose-Rate Effect on Proliferation Suppression in Human Cell Lines Continuously Exposed to γ Rays

Journal

RADIATION RESEARCH
Volume 176, Issue 4, Pages 447-458

Publisher

RADIATION RESEARCH SOC
DOI: 10.1667/RR2408.1

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Funding

  1. Institute of Research and Innovation

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Magae, J., Furukawa, C. and Ogata, H. Dose-Rate Effect on Proliferation Suppression in Human Cell Lines Continuously Exposed to gamma Rays. Radiat. Res. 176, 447-458 (2011). Irradiation time and dose rate are important factors in the evaluation of radiation risk for human health. We previously proposed a novel dose-rate effect model, the modified exponential (MOE) model, which predicts that radiation risks decline exponentially as the dose rate decreases. Here we show that, during the early phase of exposure, up to 1000 h, the proliferation of cells continuously exposed to gamma rays at a constant dose rate is gradually suppressed, even as the total dose increases. This trend holds for a number of cell lines including tumor cells, nontransformed fibroblasts and leukocytes. The accumulation of total dose by longer exposure times does not increase this suppressive effect even in cells with a defective DNA repair system, suggesting that risk is determined solely by dose rate in the later phase. The dose-rate effect in the early phase follows the MOE mode:I in DNA repair-proficient cell lines, while cells with impaired DNA-PK or ATM show no dose-rate effect. In the later phase, however, a certain dose-rate effect is observed even in mutant cell lines, and suppression of cell proliferation no longer follows the MOE model. Our results suggest that a distinct mechanism that can operate in the absence of intact DNA-PK or ATM influences the dose-rate effect in the later phase of continuous radiation exposure. (C) 2011 by Radiation Research Society

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