Alterations in heat-induced radiosensitization accompanied by nuclear structure alterations in Chinese hamster cells

This paper examined heat-induced radiosensitization in two Chinese hamster heat-resistant cell lines, HR-1 and OC-14, that were isolated from the same wild-type HA-1 cell line. It found a reduction of the magnitude of heat-induced radiosensitization after exposure to 43°C in both HR-1 and OC-14 cell...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of hyperthermia 2006-01, Vol.22 (1), p.43-60
Hauptverfasser: Laszlo, Andrei, Davidson, Teri, Harvey, Amanda, Sim, Julia E., Malyapa, Robert S., Spitz, Douglas R., Roti Roti, Joseph L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper examined heat-induced radiosensitization in two Chinese hamster heat-resistant cell lines, HR-1 and OC-14, that were isolated from the same wild-type HA-1 cell line. It found a reduction of the magnitude of heat-induced radiosensitization after exposure to 43°C in both HR-1 and OC-14 cells and a similar reduction after exposure to 45°C in HR-1 cells, but not in OC-14 cells. The effect of heat exposure on a class of ionizing radiation-induced DNA damage that inhibits the ability of nuclear DNA to undergo super-coiling changes was also studied using the fluorescent halo assay in these three cell lines. Wild type cells exposed to either 43 or 45°C before irradiation had a DNA rewinding ability that was intermediate between control and unheated cells, a phenomenon previously described as a masking effect. This masking effect was significantly reduced in HR-1 cells exposed to either 43 or 45°C or in OC-14 cells exposed to 43°C under conditions that heat-induced radiosensitization was reduced. In contrast, the masking effect was not altered in OC-14 cells exposed to 45°C, conditions under which heat-induced radiosensitization was similar to that observed in wild-type HA-1 cells. These results suggest that a reduction in the masking effect is associated with a reduction of the magnitude of heat-induced radiosensitization in the HR-1 and OC-14 heat-resistant cell lines. The reduction of the masking effect in the cell lines resistant to heat-induced radiosensitization was associated with neither a reduction in the magnitude of the heat-induced increase in total nuclear protein content nor major differences in the protein profiles of the nucleoids isolated from heated cells.
ISSN:0265-6736
1464-5157
DOI:10.1080/02656730500394296