A 1 m diameter water lens was used to focus solar radiation, giving an 8‐fold concentration of the total spectrum and a cytocidal flux similar to that of laboratory UV sources. Survival curves for human melanoma cells were similar for sunlight and 254 nm UV, in that Dq, was usually larger than Do. An xeroderma pigmentosum lymphoblastoid line was equally sensitive to both agents and human cell lines sensitive to ionizing radiation (lymphoblastoid lines), crosslinking agents or monofunctional alkylating agents (melanoma lines) had the same 254 nm UV and solar survival responses as appropriate control lines. Two melanoma sublines derived separately by 16 cycles of treatment with sunlight or 254 nm UV were crossresistant to both agents. In one melanoma cell line used for further studies, DNA strand breaks and DNA‐protein crosslinking were induced in melanoma cells by sunlight but pyrimidine dimers (paper chromatography) and DNA interstrand crosslinking (alkaline elution) could not be detected. The solar fiuence response of DNA repair synthesis was much less than that from equitoxic 254 nm UV, reaching a maximum near the Do value and then declining; semiconservative DNA synthesis on the other hand remained high. These effects were not due to changes in thymidine pool sizes. Solar exposure did not have a major effect on 254 nm UV‐induced repair synthesis.
Solar irradiation of a panel of human cell lines revealed three phenomena relevant to understanding the biological role of melanin; a heavily melanised melanoma line (MM418) was considerably more resistant to solar killing compared with HeLa and amelanotic melanoma cells of similar size and DNA content; MM418 cells were also resistant to killing by artificial UVB and by hydrogen peroxide generated in situ with extracellular glucose oxidase; and no difference in survival between the cell lines was found using 254 nm UV or gamma radiation. MM418 cells were resistant to sunlight when irradiated as attached monolayers but not when irradiated in suspension. Further studies showed that resistance to solar radiation in MM418 cells was not due to less DNA damage, as judged by inhibition of semiconservative DNA synthesis, or to enhanced constitutive or induced repair determined by reactivation of irradiated adenovirus. These results indicate that melanisation protects human cells from solar UVB in vitro and that the mechanism is associated with protection from hydrogen peroxide‐type damage rather than direct shielding of DNA.
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