scholarly journals The Effect of Heavy-Ion Beams with High Linear Energy Transfer on Mutant Production in M1 Generation of Torenia fournieri

CYTOLOGIA ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-322
Author(s):  
Ayaka Matsuta ◽  
Takahiro Mayuzumi ◽  
Hajime Katano ◽  
Masanori Hatashita ◽  
Keiichi Takagi ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 58 (6) ◽  
pp. 803-808 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshiya Furusawa ◽  
Mizuho Nakano-Aoki ◽  
Yoshitaka Matsumoto ◽  
Ryoichi Hirayama ◽  
Alisa Kobayashi ◽  
...  

Abstract The quality of the sublethal damage (SLD) after irradiation with high–linear energy transfer (LET) ion beams was investigated with low-LET photons. Chinese hamster V79 cells and human squamous carcinoma SAS cells were first exposed to a priming dose of different ion beams at different LETs at the Heavy Ion Medical Accelerator in the Chiba facility. The cells were kept at room temperature and then exposed to a secondary test dose of X-rays. Based on the repair kinetics study, the surviving fraction of cells quickly increased with the repair time, and reached a plateau in 2–3 h, even when cells had received priming monoenergetic high-LET beams or spread-out Bragg peak beams as well as X-ray irradiation. The shapes of the cell survival curves from the secondary test X-rays, after repair of the damage caused by the high-LET irradiation, were similar to those obtained from cells exposed to primary X-rays only. Complete SLD repairs were observed, even when the LET of the primary ion beams was very high. These results suggest that the SLD caused by high-LET irradiation was repaired well, and likewise, the damage caused by the X-rays. In cells where the ion beam had made a direct hit in the core region in an ion track, lethal damage to the domain was produced, resulting in cell death. On the other hand, in domains that had received a glancing hit in the low-LET penumbra region, the SLD produced was completely repaired.


Synchronous suspensions of the radiosensitive S/S variant of the L5178Y murine leukaemic lymphoblast at different positions in the cell cycle were exposed aerobically to segments of heavy-ion beams ( 20 Ne, 28 Si, 40 Ar, 56 Fe and 93 Nb) in the Bragg plateau regions of energy deposition. The incident energies of the ion beams were in the range of 460 ± 95 MeV u -1 , and the calculated values of linear energy transfer (LET ∞ ) for the primary nuclei in the irradiated samples were 33 ± 3, 60 ± 3, 95 ± 5, 213 ± 21 and 478 ± 36 keV μm -1 , respectively; 280 kVp X-rays were used as the baseline radiation. Generally, the maxima or inflections in relations between relative biological effectiveness (RBE) and LET ∞ were dependent upon the cycle position at which the cells were irradiated. Certain of those relations were influenced by post-irradiation hypothermia. Irradiation in the cell cycle at mid -G 1 to mid-G 1 +3 h, henceforth called G 1 to G 1 + 3 h, resulted in survival curves that were close approximations to simple exponential functions. As the LET ∞ was increased, the RBE did not exceed 1.0, and by 478 keV μm -1 it had fallen to 0.39. Although similar behaviour has been reported for inactivation of proteins and certain viruses by ionizing radiations, so far the response of the S/S variant is unique for mammalian cells. The slope of the survival curve for X-photons ( D 0 :0.27 Gy) is reduced in G 1 to G 1 + 3 h by post-irradiation incubation at hypothermic temperatures and reaches a minimum ( D 0 : 0.51 Gy) at 25 °C. As the LET ∞ was increased, however, the extent of hypothermic recovery was reduced progressively and essentially was eliminated at 478 keV μm -1 . At the cycle position where the peak of radioresistance to X-photons occurs for S/S cells, G 1 + Sh, increases in LET ∞ elicited only small increases in RBE (at 10% survival), until a maximum was reached around 200 keV μm -1 . At 478 keV μm -1 , what little remained of the variation in response through the cell cycle could be attributed to secondary radiations (δ rays) and smaller nuclei produced by fragmentation of the primary ions. Definitions 1. Linear energy transfer (LET ∞ ) is the energy deposited per unit length of track by an ionizing particle and usually is measured in kiloelectron volts per micrometer (in water). 2. Penumbra . Atomic interactions along the track of a heavy ion result in the ejection of electrons with energies sufficient to move beyond the region of dense ionization which constitutes the track core, and so may be considered to form a penumbra of sparsely ionizing radiations around the track core. 3. RBE . The effectiveness of a densely ionizing radiation (heavy ion) compared to a sparsely ionizing radiation, e. g. X- or γ -photons, is measured by the inverse ratio of the doses of each radiation needed to produce a given radiobiological effect, and is known as the relative biological effectiveness (RBE): the usual reference radiation is 250 kVp X-rays. 4. D 0 is a measure of the radiosensitivity of a cell as determined from the (limiting) linear slope of the survival curve, and is the dose in Gray (1 Gy ≡ 1 Joule kg -1 ) required to reduce the survival at a point anywhere in that region of the survival curve to 37% of its value at that point.


1998 ◽  
Vol 149 (2) ◽  
pp. 128 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Baldacchino ◽  
D. Le Parc ◽  
B. Hickel ◽  
M. Gardès-Albert ◽  
Z. Abedinzadeh ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 87 (9) ◽  
pp. 954-963 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine E. Hellweg ◽  
Christa Baumstark-Khan ◽  
Claudia Schmitz ◽  
Patrick Lau ◽  
Matthias M. Meier ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 254 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sami Benzina ◽  
Frederic Debomy ◽  
Jean-Pierre Bergerat ◽  
Jean-Marc Denis ◽  
John Gueulette ◽  
...  

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