Mechanism of Killing Chinese Hamster Ovary Cells Heated in G 1 : Effects on DNA Synthesis and Blocking in G 2

Abstract
To determine where in the cell cycle Chinses hamster ovary cells die following heating in G1, a mild hyperthermia treatment, i.e., 10 or 11.5 min at 45.5.degree. C, resulting in 40-50% cell kill was used. After a 7-14-h delay in G1, the cells heated in G1 eventually entered S phase and replicated all their DNA. Both an autoradiographic analysis with tritiated thymidine and a bromodeoxyuridine-propidium iodide bivariate analysis in flow cytometry revealed that both clonogenic and nonclonogenic cells were delayed in progression through S phase for at least 4 h. Then they completed replication of all their DNA and entered G2. Alkaline sucrose gradient sedimentation analysis revealed that these heated cells could complete replicon elongation into cluster-sized molecules of 120-160 S which persisted for 2-12 h after heating. However, further replicon elongation into multicluster-sized molecules > 160 S required an additional 12 h in heated cells compared to the 4 h needed in unheated control cells. Our results when compared with the literature suggest that when G1 cells are heated to a survival level of about 50%, the nonclonogenic cells recover from a long delay in G1, traverse S at a reduced rate, and then die either in G2 or as multinucleated cells after an aberrant division.