AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers have studied the effects of low doses of ionizing radiation and chemical toxins on biological systems, but there’s still a lack of data on how plants and animals adapt to environmental stressors.
  • The study focused on the genotoxic effects in earthworms from areas with high levels of natural radionuclides and heavy metals.
  • While DNA damage levels in contaminated earthworms were similar to those in a reference population, the ability to repair DNA damage was significantly higher in contaminated earthworms exposed to additional radiation.

Article Abstract

Low doses of ionizing radiation and chemical toxic agent effects on biological systems on different organization levels have been studied by numerous researchers. But there is a clear lack of experimental data that allow one to reveal molecular and cellular adaptations of plants and animals from natural populations to adverse effects of environmental factors. The present study was aimed to assess genotoxic effects in earthworms Aporrectodea caliginosa Savigny and Lumbricus rubellus Hoffmeister sampled from the populations that during numerous generations inhabited the territories with a technogeneously enhanced content of natural origin radionuclides and heavy metals in soil. The levels ofthe DNA damage detected with alkaline and neutral versions of Comet-assay in invertebrates from contaminated territories were established not to differ from the spontaneous level found in the animals from the reference population. At the same time the rate of the DNA damage reparation induced in A. caliginosa sampled from the contaminated sites with additional acute γ-irradiation (4 Gy) was found to be considerably higher as compared with earthworms from the reference population.

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