Effect of Membrane Fatty Acid Substitution and Temperature on Repair of Sublethal Damage in Mammalian Cells
- 1 May 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Radiation Research
- Vol. 102 (2) , 206-212
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3576467
Abstract
Repair of sublethal radiation damage (SLD) was investigated as a function of temperature in mouse fibroblast LM cells with different membrane lipid composition. Rigidification or fluidization of the cellular membranes was accomplished by incorporation of myristic acid and arachidonic acid, respectively, in the phospholipids of the membranes. The SLD repair after radiation was essentially the same for the cells with the more rigid (saturated fatty acid) membranes and the cells with the more fluid (polyunsaturated fatty acid) membranes. This observation was made for repair at 37.degree. C as well as for repair at hypothermic temperatures. Incorporation of polyunsaturated fatty acid protected the cells against hypothermic death. Although membranes apparently are likely targets for cell killing by low temperature treatments, membrane lipids are probably not involved in the repair of sublethal radiation damage. Neither the degree of polyunsaturation of the lipids nor the degree of fluidity of the membrane evidently is important for radiation-induced killing of mammalian cells.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Radiation Effects on Membranes: III. The Effect of X Irradiation on Survival of Mammalian Cells Substituted by Polyunsaturated Fatty AcidsRadiation Research, 1982
- Potentially Lethal and DNA Radiation Damage: Similarities in Inhibition of Repair by Medium Containing D 2 O and by Hypertonic BufferRadiation Research, 1980
- Potentially Lethal Damage versus Sublethal Damage: Independent Repair Processes in Actively Growing Chinese Hamster CellsRadiation Research, 1979