scholarly journals Replication Stress-Associated DSBs Induced by Ionizing Radiation Risk Genomic Destabilization and Associated Clonal Evolution

iScience ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 102313
Author(s):  
Yusuke Matsuno ◽  
Mai Hyodo ◽  
Mafuka Suzuki ◽  
Yosuke Tanaka ◽  
Yasunori Horikoshi ◽  
...  
1984 ◽  
Vol 23 (02) ◽  
pp. 87-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Flemming

SummaryIn the beginning of medical radiology, only the benefit of ionizing radiation was obvious, and radiation was handled and applied generously. After late effects had become known, the radiation exposure was reduced to doses following which no such effects were found. Thus, it was assumed that one could obtain an optimal medical benefit without inducing any hazard. Later, due to experimental findings, hypotheses arose (linear dose-effect response, no time factor) which led to the opinion that even low and lowest radiation doses were relevant for the induction of late effects. A radiation fear grew, which was unintentionally strengthened by radiation protection decrees: even for low doses a radiation risk could be calculated. Therefore, it was believed that there could still exist a radiation hazard, and the radiation benefit remained in question. If, however, all presently known facts are considered, one must conclude that large radiation doses are hazardous and low doses are inefficient, whereas lowest doses have a biopositive effect. Ionizing radiation, therefore, may cause both, hazard as well as benefit. Which of the two effects prevails is determined by the level of dose.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 36-39
Author(s):  
Samson O. Paulinus ◽  
Benjamin E. Udoh ◽  
Bassey E. Archibong ◽  
Akpama E. Egong ◽  
Akwa E. Erim ◽  
...  

Objective: Physicians who often request for computed tomography (CT) scan examinations are expected to have sound knowledge of radiation exposure (risks) to patients in line with the basic radiation protection principles according to the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP), the Protection of Persons Undergoing Medical Exposure or Treatment (POPUMET), and the Ionizing Radiation (Medical Exposure) Regulations (IR(ME)R). The aim is to assess the level of requesting physicians’ knowledge of ionizing radiation from CT scan examinations in two Nigerian tertiary hospitals. Materials and Methods: An 18-item-based questionnaire was distributed to 141 practicing medical doctors, excluding radiologists with work experience from 0 to >16 years in two major teaching hospitals in Nigeria with a return rate of 69%, using a voluntary sampling technique. Results: The results showed that 25% of the respondents identified CT thorax, abdomen, and pelvis examination as having the highest radiation risk, while 22% said that it was a conventional chest X-ray. Furthermore, 14% concluded that CT head had the highest risk while 9% gave their answer to be conventional abdominal X-ray. In addition, 17% inferred that magnetic resonance imaging had the highest radiation risk while 11% had no idea. Furthermore, 25.5% of the respondents have had training on ionizing radiation from CT scan examinations while 74.5% had no training. Majority (90%) of the respondents were not aware of the ICRP guidelines for requesting investigations with very little (<3%) or no knowledge (0%) on the POPUMET and the IR(ME)R respectively. Conclusion: There is low level of knowledge of ionizing radiation from CT scan examinations among requesting physicians in the study locations.


2010 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 192-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danijela Obradovic-Arsic ◽  
Snezana Nenadovic ◽  
Dejan Filipovic ◽  
Bojana Mihajlovic

This paper provides information about potential effects of natural ionizing radiation on general population health. Natural radionuclides are particularly stressed, as well as health effects of high and lower doses. Radio-ecological areals have been presented for Serbia, while radiation risk has been assessed for the population of Serbia according to census years.


Author(s):  
K. Loganovsky ◽  
◽  
P. Fedirko ◽  
K. Kuts ◽  
D. Marazziti ◽  
...  

Background.Exposure to ionizing radiation could affect the brain and eyes leading to cognitive and vision impairment, behavior disorders and performance decrement during professional irradiation at medical radiology, including interventional radiological procedures, long-term space flights, and radiation accidents. Objective. The objective was to analyze the current experimental, epidemiological, and clinical data on the radiation cerebro-ophthalmic effects. Materials and methods. In our analytical review peer-reviewed publications via the bibliographic and scientometric bases PubMed / MEDLINE, Scopus, Web of Science, and selected papers from the library catalog of NRCRM – the leading institution in the field of studying the medical effects of ionizing radiation – were used. Results. The probable radiation-induced cerebro-ophthalmic effects in human adults comprise radiation cataracts, radiation glaucoma, radiation-induced optic neuropathy, retinopathies, angiopathies as well as specific neurocognitive deficit in the various neuropsychiatric pathology including cerebrovascular pathology and neurodegenerative diseases. Specific attention is paid to the likely stochastic nature of many of those effects. Those prenatally and in childhood exposed are a particular target group with a higher risk for possible radiation effects and neurodegenerative diseases. Conclusions. The experimental, clinical, epidemiological, anatomical and pathophysiological rationale for visual system and central nervous system (CNS) radiosensitivity is given. The necessity for further international studies with adequate dosimetric support and the follow-up medical and biophysical monitoring of high radiation risk cohorts is justified. The first part of the study currently being published presents the results of the study of the effects of irradiation in the participants of emergency works at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant (ChNPP). Key words: ionizing radiation, cerebroophthalmic effects, neurocognitive deficit, radiation accident, radiation cataracts, macular degeneration.


2019 ◽  
Vol 187 (1) ◽  
pp. 129-137
Author(s):  
V A Kudryashev ◽  
D S Kim

Abstract The purpose of the research is to develop an integrated technique for determining the effective dose (E) of external and internal exposure by different sources of ionizing radiation. The proposing technique for determining the total effective dose is based on three methods of calculation. The first one is multiplying the value of the individual dose equivalent $H_{p}(10)$ by the factor of 0.642 to account for radiation shielding by various organs and tissues and its backscattering. The second method is multiplying $H_{p}(10)$ by the conversion factor of air kerma in free air in a plate phantom, depending on the photon energy. The third method is multiplying $H_{p}(10)$ by the sum of the radiosensitivity coefficients of various organs and tissues. As a result of research, a complex method was developed for determining the total effective dose, composed of doses of cosmic radiation, external gamma-, beta- and neutron radiation, internal exposure from radionuclides, including CDP of radon and thoron, entering the body through the organs of digestion and respiration. The proposed technique for determining the total effective dose allows one to take into account the comprehensive effect of ionizing radiation sources on a person and to obtain a more accurate measure of radiation risk than the existing methods provide.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3340-3340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marwan Kwok ◽  
Nicholas Davies ◽  
Angelo Agathanggelou ◽  
Edward Smith ◽  
Eva Petermann ◽  
...  

Abstract DNA damage response (DDR) defects, particularly TP53 or biallelic ATM aberrations, are associated with chemoresistance in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Chemoimmunotherapy or B-cell receptor signaling inhibitors alone may not be sufficient to overcome adverse prognosis or provide durable response in TP53 or biallelic ATM inactivated CLL. In particular, genomic instability resulting from impaired DDR facilitates rapid clonal evolution leading to treatment refractoriness or disease relapse. Development of therapeutic approaches specifically targeting DDR defects is therefore necessary for effective long-term control of DDR-defective CLL. We previously demonstrated selective cytotoxicity of the ATR inhibitor AZD6738 towards TP53 or ATM null CLL cells, and validated this in CLL xenograft models for biallelic TP53 or ATM loss. Here, we provide mechanistic insight into the synthetically lethal interactions between ATR pathway inhibition and TP53 or ATM loss in CLL, and offer experimental evidence supporting the use of ATR inhibition in combination with conventional chemotherapies and other targeted therapies in CLL. To determine the mechanism of ATR inhibition in CLL, we first investigated its effect on DDR-intact cycling primary cells. We observed compensatory activation of the ATM/p53 pathway in AZD6738-treated cells in response to hydroxyurea, providing evidence for crosstalk between ATR and ATM/p53 pathways. Next, we explored the cellular consequence of ATR inhibition in CLL cells with DDR loss. To determine the impact of ATR inhibition on DNA replication, we performed DNA fiber analysis, which revealed significantly increased replication fork stalling and firing of replication origins upon AZD6738 treatment in ATM/p53-defective CLL. To investigate the effect of ATR inhibition on DNA damage, we measured γH2AX and 53BP1 foci formation, markers of DNA double-strand breaks. Significant induction of γH2AX and 53BP1 foci was seen in ATM/p53-defective CLL cells upon AZD6738 treatment, suggesting that ATR inhibition exacerbates replication stress in ATM/p53 defective cells by imposing requirement for DDR through the ATM/p53 pathway. On the contrary, 53BP1 bodies, a marker of unreplicated DNA, appeared in ATM/p53 proficient but not in ATM/p53 deficient cells following AZD6738 exposure, indicating that cell cycle arrest in response to replication stress is ATM/p53 dependent. This was corroborated by cell cycle profiling and co-labeling experiments of γH2AX with phosphohistone H3 ser10, a marker of mitosis, showing that ATM/p53-defective CLL cells carrying unrepaired DNA damage continued to cycle. Thus, ATR inhibition results in accumulation of intolerable levels of DNA damage in DDR-defective CLL, leading to cell death by mitotic catastrophe, which we have confirmed both in vitro and in AZD6738-treated murine xenograft models. The benefit of ATR inhibition as a therapeutic strategy for DDR-defective CLL lies in its ability to alter the subclonal landscape in favor of less unstable DDR-proficient subclones, which are less susceptible to clonal evolution, thus reducing the likelihood of disease relapse. We reasoned that this provides a strong rationale for addition of AZD6738 to existing therapeutic agents for the treatment of CLL with DDR defects. We demonstrated synergistic and additive effects of low-dose AZD6738 in ATM/p53-defective CLL cells with DNA damaging agents such as chlorambucil, fludarabine, bendamustine and cyclophosphamide, BCR-signaling inhibitors and the PARP inhibitor olaparib. We validated the AZD6738 plus chlorambucil combination in biallelic TP53 or ATM inactivated primary CLL xenografts, where combined AZD6738/chlorambucil treatment was superior to chlorambucil alone, as evidenced by significantly greater reduction in tumor load and percentage of CLL subclones with del(17p) or del(11q) in animals treated with combination regimen compared to single-agent chlorambucil. Similar investigations evaluating AZD6738 plus ibrutinib versus ibrutinib monotherapy in primary CLL xenografts are currently underway. We conclude that ATR inhibition is a suitable approach for targeting the loss of p53 function in aggressive CLL subclones and should be considered as a valuable addition to DNA damaging agents and current targeted treatments. Disclosures Off Label Use: ATR inhibitor AZD6738 targets TP53-null or ATM-null phenotype inducing synthetic lethality. Brown:AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals: Employment, Patents & Royalties. Lau:AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals: Employment.


2004 ◽  
Vol 24 (11) ◽  
pp. 5060-5068 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Huang ◽  
Suzanne Grim ◽  
Leslie E. Smith ◽  
Perry M. Kim ◽  
Jac A. Nickoloff ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Exposure to ionizing radiation can result in delayed effects that can be detected in the progeny of an irradiated cell multiple generations after the initial exposure. These effects are described under the rubric of radiation-induced genomic instability and encompass multiple genotoxic endpoints. We have developed a green fluorescence protein (GFP)-based assay and demonstrated that ionizing radiation induces genomic instability in human RKO-derived cells and in human hamster hybrid GM10115 cells, manifested as increased homologous recombination (HR). Up to 10% of cells cultured after irradiation produce mixed GFP+/− colonies indicative of delayed HR or, in the case of RKO-derived cells, mutation and deletion. Consistent with prior studies, delayed chromosomal instability correlated with delayed reproductive cell death. In contrast, cells displaying delayed HR showed no evidence of delayed reproductive cell death, and there was no correlation between delayed chromosomal instability and delayed HR, indicating that these forms of genome instability arise by distinct mechanisms. Because delayed hyperrecombination can be induced at doses of ionizing radiation that are not associated with significantly reduced cell viability, these data may have important implications for assessment of radiation risk and understanding the mechanisms of radiation carcinogenesis.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine M. Evans ◽  
Jenna Bodmer ◽  
Bryce Edwards ◽  
James Levins ◽  
Amanda O’Meara ◽  
...  

Exposure to ionizing radiation has potential for acute and chronic health effects. Within the general public of the United States, there may be a discrepancy between perceived and actual health risks. In conjunction with the Vermont Department of Health, a survey designed to assess public perception and knowledge of ionizing radiation was administered at 6 Vermont locationsn=169. Descriptive and inferential statistical analyses were conducted. Eighty percent of respondents underestimated the contribution of medical imaging tests to total ionizing radiation exposure. Although only thirty-nine percent of participants were confident in their healthcare professional’s knowledge of ionizing radiation, most would prefer to receive information from their healthcare professional. Only one-third of individuals who received a medical imaging test in the past year were educated by their healthcare professional about the risks of these tests. Those who tested their home for radon were twice as likely to choose radon as the greatest ionizing radiation risk to self. Although respondents had an above-average education level, there were many misperceptions of actual risks of exposure to ionizing radiation, particularly of medical imaging tests. Educating healthcare professionals would therefore have a profound and positive impact on public understanding of ionizing radiation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document