Correlation between Thermal Radiosensitization and Heat-induced Loss of DNA Polymerase β Activity in CHO Cells
- 1 January 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Radiation Biology
- Vol. 63 (2) , 215-221
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09553009314550281
Abstract
The increase in radiosensitivity caused by various kinds of single and combined heat treatments was studied in CHO cells and related to the heat-induced loss of the DNA polymerase β activity. Thermal radiosensitization was quantified by the thermal enhancement ratio TER10% determined on the 10% survival level and by the parameters α and β obtained from fitting cellular survival data to the equation − ln(S/S0) = αD + βD2. The values for TER10% and the α-term showed only a poor correlation with the inverse of polymerase β activity; the data for single heating at temperatures exceeding 41·5°C and the data for thermotolerant cells fell on the same straight line, whereas for single heating at T ⩽ 41·5°C and for cells exposed to a high-to-low temperature sequence (step-down heating) the increase in TER10% and α was much steeper than found for the other heat treatments. By contrast, a linear relationship was shown to exist between the β-term of cellular radiosensitivity and the loss of polymerase β activity as expressed by the reciprocal value of the enzyme activity. This relationship was the same for all kinds of heat treatments applied, suggesting that for CHO cells the increase in the β-term observed after combined treatment with heat and radiation might be causally related to the heat-induced loss of polymerase β activity.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of Heat on Induction and Repair of DNA Strand Breaks in X-irradiated CHO CellsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1992
- Effect of Thermotolerance and Step-down Heating on Thermal Radiosensitization in CHO CellsInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1992
- Thermal Radiosensitization in CHO Cells by Prior Heating at 41–46°CInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1991
- Interaction of Hyperthermia and Radiation in Tolerant and Nontolerant HeLa S3 cells: Role of DNA Polymerase InactivationInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1989
- Saturable Repair Models of Radiation Action in Mammalian CellsRadiation Research, 1985
- Strand break repair, DNA polymerase activity and heat radiosensitization in thermotolerant cellsInternational Journal of Hyperthermia, 1985
- Dose fractionation, dose rate and iso-effect relationships for normal tissue responsesInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 1982
- A Generalized Formulation of Dual Radiation ActionRadiation Research, 1978
- Hyperthermic Effects on DNA Repair MechanismsRadiology, 1977
- Differential heat sensitivity of mammalian DNA polymerasesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1977