DNA Instability, Paternal Irradiation and Leukaemia in Children Around Sellafield
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Radiation Biology
- Vol. 60 (4) , 581-595
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09553009114552421
Abstract
The chemical instability of DNA under physiological conditions requires that cells have highly developed processes for repairing stochastic single-strand damage. It is proposed here that provided ionizing-radiation-induced single-strand damage does not occur at a rate sufficient to perturb the dynamic steady state between degradation and repair, it can be regarded as "irrelevant' to biological effect, leaving double-strand damage and DNA-protein crosslinks as "relevant' damage to biological effect. At dose rates of approximately 0.05 Gy/min low-LET radiation the rate of induced single-strand damage equals that of the spontaneous damage, and in this region a transition, with increasing dose-rate, from constant effect to increasing effect, will be expected. This is observed in studies of specific locus mutation by radiation in the male mouse. The application of this biophysical principle governing the influence of radiation dose-rate, to the association observed between paternal preconceptional dose to Sellafield workers and childhood leukaemia in their offspring, shows that the likelihood of a causal relationship is extremely remote.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Leukaemia and radiationNature, 1990
- Results of case-control study of leukaemia and lymphoma among young people near Sellafield nuclear plant in West Cumbria.BMJ, 1990
- The Fate of DNA–protein Crosslinks Formed in γ-Irradiated Metaphase CellsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1990
- Molecular mapping within the mouse albino-deletion complex.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1989
- The Chinese hamster aprt gene as a mutational target. Its sequence and an analysis of direct and inverted repeatsMutation Research Letters, 1989
- Relationship of Microdosimetric Techniques to Applications in Biological SystemsPublished by Elsevier ,1987
- Abnormal Distribution of Double Strand Breaks in DNA after Direct Action of Ionizing EnergyInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1985
- A General Theory of CarcinogenesisProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1973
- Double Strand Rejoining in Mammalian DNANature New Biology, 1973
- Mutation and Cancer: Statistical Study of RetinoblastomaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1971