RADIATION-INDUCED GENOMIC INSTABILITY: RADIATION QUALITY AND DOSE RESPONSE
- 1 July 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Health Physics
- Vol. 85 (1) , 23-29
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00004032-200307000-00006
Abstract
Genomic instability is a term used to describe a phenomenon that results in the accumulation of multiple changes required to convert a stable genome of a normal cell to an unstable genome characteristic of a tumor. There has been considerable recent debate concerning the importance of genomic instability in human cancer and its temporal occurrence in the carcinogenic process. Radiation is capable of inducing genomic instability in mammalian cells and instability is thought to be the driving force responsible for radiation carcinogenesis. Genomic instability is characterized by a large collection of diverse endpoints that include large-scale chromosomal rearrangements and aberrations, amplification of genetic material, aneuploidy, micronucleus formation, microsatellite instability, and gene mutation. The capacity of radiation to induce genomic instability depends to a large extent on radiation quality or linear energy transfer (LET) and dose. There appears to be a low dose threshold effect with low LET, beyond which no additional genomic instability is induced. Low doses of both high and low LET radiation are capable of inducing this phenomenon. This report reviews data concerning dose rate effects of high and low LET radiation and their capacity to induce genomic instability assayed by chromosomal aberrations, delayed lethal mutations, micronuclei and apoptosis.Keywords
This publication has 63 references indexed in Scilit:
- Delayed Cell Cycle Progression in Human Lymphoblastoid Cells after Exposure to High-LET Radiation Correlates with Extremely Localized DNA DamageRadiation Research, 2002
- Characteristics of genomic instability in clones of TK6 human lymphoblasts surviving exposure to 56Fe ions.Radiation Research, 2002
- Genotoxic effects of high-energy iron particles in human lymphoblasts differing in radiation sensitivity.Radiation Research, 2001
- Absence of genomic instability in mice following prenatal low dose-rate γ-irradiationInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 2000
- Delayed lethality, apoptosis and micronucleus formation in human fibroblasts irradiated with X-rays or alpha-particlesInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1999
- Clonal Analysis of Delayed Karyotypic Abnormalities and Gene Mutations in Radiation-Induced Genetic InstabilityMolecular and Cellular Biology, 1996
- The proliferative capacity of mouse fibrosarcoma cells that survived x-irradiationRadiation and Environmental Biophysics, 1995
- Clonal chromosome aberrations and genomic instability in X-irradiated human T-lymphocyte culturesMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1993
- Delayed Reproductive Death in X-irradiated Chinese Hamster Ovary CellsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1991
- Expression of Lethal Mutations in Progeny of Irradiated Mammalian CellsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1989