Abstract— The reduced pyridine coenzymes NADPH and NADH produced superoxide anion(“CK”) from ground state molecular oxygen when irradiated by ultraviolet (UV) radiation extending from 290 to 405 nm as detected by cytochrome c reduction. Superoxide dismutase (SOD), but not catalase or heat‐inactivated SOD, decreased the amount of cytochrome c reduced, indicating that O2− was responsible for the reduction of cytochrome c. Decreased oxygen tension during irradiation also inhibited production of O2−. Quantum yields for the production of the anion were in the region of 10−7 to 10−9 mol per photon. These data indicate that NADH and NADPH can act as type II photosensitizers of both far‐and near‐UV radiation, and that the deleterious biological effects of exposure to these radiations such as erythema and dermal carcinogenesis may be mediated at least in part through the generation of O2−.
The radioprotector 2-[aminopropyl)amino] ethanethiol (WR1065), which has been reported to reduce the cytotoxic and mutagenic effects of low LET radiation, was investigated for its ability to protect against low LET (60Co gamma ray) and high LET (fission-spectrum neutron)-induced chromosome damage in V79 cells. Cells were irradiated in G2 phase in the presence or absence of 4 mM WR1065 and were harvested and analyzed 2 h later for chromatid-type aberrations. Irradiation of G2-phase V79 cells in the presence of WR1065 resulted in a 30 to 50% reduction in the frequency of gamma-ray and neutron-induced chromatid-type breaks and exchanges. The effects were found only after exposures of greater than 200 cGy gamma-ray or 50 cGy neutron irradiation. The radioprotector was effective at reducing neutron-induced aberrations after exposures at dose rates of both 10 and 43 cGy/min. Thus the radioprotector WR1065 is an effective anti-clastogenic agent in V79 cells, protecting against both 60Co gamma-ray and fission-spectrum neutron-induced aberrations, when present during irradiation.
It has been suggested that DNA strand breaks are the molecular lesions responsible for radiation-induced lethality and that their repair is the basis for the recovery of irradiated cells from sublethal and potentially lethal damage. EM9 is a Chinese hamster ovary cell line that is hypersensitive to killing by X rays and has been reported to have a defect in the rate of rejoining of DNA single-strand breaks. To establish the importance of DNA strand-break repair in cellular recovery from sublethal and potentially lethal X-ray damage, those two parameters, recovery from sublethal and potentially lethal damage, were studied in EM9 cells as well as in EM9's parental repair-proficient strain, AA8. As previously reported, EM9 is the more radiosensitive cell line, having a D0 of 0.98 Gy compared to a D0 of 1.56 Gy for AA8 cells. DNA alkaline elution studies suggest that EM9 cells repair DNA single-strand breaks at a slower rate than AA8 cells. Neutral elution analysis suggests that EM9 cells also repair DNA double-strand breaks more slowly than AA8 cells. All of these data are consistent with the hypothesis that DNA strand-break ligation is defective in EM9 cells and that this defect accounts for increased radiosensitivity. The kinetics and magnitude of recovery from sublethal and potentially lethal damage, however, were similar for both EM9 and AA8 cells. Six-hour recovery ratios for sublethal damage repair were found to be 2.47 for AA8 cells and 1.31 for EM9 cells. Twenty-four-hour recovery ratios for potentially lethal damage repair were 3.2 for AA8 and 3.3 for EM9 cells. Both measurements were made at approximately equitoxic doses. Thus, the defect in EM9 cells that confers radiosensitivity and affects DNA strand-break rejoining does not affect sublethal damage repair or potentially lethal damage repair.
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