Repair of Sublethal Damage in Mammalian Cells Irradiated at Ultrahigh Dose Rates
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Radiation Research
- Vol. 77 (1) , 156-169
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3575085
Abstract
The lethal response of asynchronous Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells exposed to single and split doses of radiation at conventional or ultrahigh dose rates was examined to determine whether repair of sublethal damage occurs in cells irradiated at ultrahigh dose rates. The high-intensity irradiations were performed with electrons delivered in single 3 ns pulses from a 600 kV field emission source under medium-removed, thin-layer conditions. Conventional dose-rate experiments were done under identical thin-layer conditions with 50 kVp X-rays, or under full-medium conditions with 280 kVp X-rays. Oxygenated cells were irradiated and maintained at 22-24.degree. C between exposures. Survival did not increase as the time berween 2 doses of pulsed electrons increased from 0-4 min, indicating no evidence of fast repair. However, increased survival was observed when 30-90 min was allowed to elapse between the split doses. The half-time for maximum repair was .simeq. 80 min irrespective of the exposure conditions and radiation modality used. Observed repair ratios increased from .simeq. 2-4 as the single-dose surviving fraction decreased from 10-2 to 5 .times. 10-4. Over this survival range the repair ratios, measured at the same value of surviving fraction, were independent of dose rate. The observed repair ratios imply that the shoulder regions of the nonfractionated X-ray and pulsed-electron survival curves were not completely restored between the split doses. However, the fraction of the shoulder restored between split doses of radiation was dose-rate-independent. Sublethal damage can be repaired in oxygenated CHO cells irradiated at dose rates of the order of 1011 rad/s.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oxygen Sensitization of CHO Cells at Ultrahigh Dose Rates: Prelude to Oxygen Diffusion StudiesRadiation Research, 1978
- The Effects of Ultra-high Dose Rates on Survival and Sublethal Repair in Chinese-hamster CellsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1978
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