This report presents data for survival of mouse intestinal crypt cells, mouse testes weight loss as an indicator of survival of spermatogonial stem cells, and survival of rat 9L spheroid cells after irradiation in the plateau region of unmodified particle beams ranging in mass from 4He to 139La. The LET values range from 1.6 to 953 keV/microns. These studies examine the RBE-LET relationship for two normal tissues and for an in vitro tissue model, multicellular spheroids. When the RBE values are plotted as a function of LET, the resulting curve is characterized by a region in which RBE increases with LET, a peak RBE at an LET value of 100 keV/microns, and a region of decreasing RBE at LETs greater than 100 keV/microns. Inactivation cross sections (sigma) for these three biological systems have been calculated from the exponential terminal slope of the dose-response relationship for each ion. For this determination the dose is expressed as particle fluence and the parameter sigma indicates effect per particle. A plot of sigma versus LET shows that the curve for testes weight loss is shifted to the left, indicating greater radiosensitivity at lower LETs than for crypt cell and spheroid cell survival. The curves for cross section versus LET for all three model systems show similar characteristics with a relatively linear portion below 100 keV/microns and a region of lessened slope in the LET range above 100 keV/microns for testes and spheroids. The data indicate that the effectiveness per particle increases as a function of LET and, to a limited extent, Z, at LET values greater than 100 keV/microns. Previously published results for spread Bragg peaks are also summarized, and they suggest that RBE is dependent on both the LET and the Z of the particle.
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Radiat Environ Biophys
June 2002
Department of Radiation Research for Environment and Resources, Takasaki Radiation Chemistry Research Establishment, Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute (JAERI), Takasaki, Gunma, 370-1292, Japan.
To clarify the effect of heavy ions in plants, dry seeds of Arabidopsis were irradiated with carbon, neon, and argon ions with various linear energy transfer (LET) values. The relative biological effectiveness (RBE) for lethality peaked at LET values over 350 keV/microns for neon and argon ions. This LET giving the peak RBE was higher than the LET of 100-200 keV/microns which was reported to have a maximum RBE for other types of cells, such as mammalian cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Biol
August 1995
Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung, Darmstadt, Germany.
Radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks (dsbs) were measured in CHO-K1 cells by means of an experimental approach involving constant-field gel electrophoresis and densitometric scanning of ethidium bromide stained gels. For X-irradiation, an induction efficiency of 36 +/- 5 dsbs (Gy x cell)-1 was determined. With this set-up, the induction of dsbs was investigated in CHO-K1 cells after irradiation with accelerated carbon ions with specific energies ranging from 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiat Res
April 1995
Center for Radiological Research, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, New York, New York 10032.
Primary explants of Syrian hamster embryo (SHE) cells were exposed to either low-LET 250 kVp X rays or graded single doses of defined high-LET alpha particles (90, 100, 120, 150, 180 and 200 keV/microns), simulating those produced by radon progeny, and monitored for cell inactivation and oncogenic transformation. For the alpha particles the doses delivered ranged from 1 cGy to 1 Gy with an emphasis on doses less than 20 cGy, while for the X rays the doses ranged from 20 cGy to 4 Gy. The dose-response curves for cell killing by alpha particles approximated an exponential function of dose, whereas the X rays produced a curve with a shoulder characteristic of linear-quadratic relationships seen for low-LET radiations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiat Res
February 1995
Institute of Biophysics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Brno.
In this report, a quantitative interpretation of mutation induction cross sections by heavy charged particles in bacterial cells is presented. The approach is based on the calculation of the fraction of energy deposited by indirect hits in the sensitive structure. In these events the particle does not pass through the sensitive volume, but this region is hit by delta rays.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Biol
November 1994
CRC Gray Laboratory, Mount Vernon Hospital, Northwood, UK.
Understanding the critical lesions induced by ionizing radiation in DNA and their relationship to cellular effects is an important challenge in radiation biology. Much evidence has suggested that DNA double-strand breaks (dsb) are important lesions. Establishing a cause and effect relationship between initial levels of DNA dsb, their repair rate or the level of residual unrepaired breaks, and cellular effects has proved difficult in mammalian cells.
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