Given equal doses, it is well-known that densely ionizing radiations are more potent in causing a number of biological effects compared to sparsely ionizing radiations, such as x- or gamma rays. According to classical models of radiation action, this results from differences in the spatial distribution of lesions along charged particle tracks. In recent years investigators have been barraged with the alternative narrative that this is instead due to 'qualitative' differences in the types of molecular lesions that each type of radiation produces. The present review discusses, mainly from a cytogenetic perspective, the merits and shortcomings of these seemingly contradictory viewpoints. There may be a kernel of truth to the idea that qualitative differences in the types of molecular lesions produced at the nanometer level affect RBE/LET relationships, but to ignore the fact that such differences result from longer-range spatial distributions of lesions produced along charged particle tracks is an unjustifiably narrow stance tantamount to employing Occam's Broom. Not only are such spatial considerations indispensable in explaining the impact of ionization density upon higher-order biological endpoints, particularly chromosome aberrations, the explanations they provide render arguments based principally on the quality of IR damage largely superfluous.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09553002.2019.1704302DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

occam's broom
8
ionization density
8
ionizing radiations
8
charged particle
8
particle tracks
8
differences types
8
types molecular
8
molecular lesions
8
lesions produced
8
broom dirty
4

Similar Publications

Given equal doses, it is well-known that densely ionizing radiations are more potent in causing a number of biological effects compared to sparsely ionizing radiations, such as x- or gamma rays. According to classical models of radiation action, this results from differences in the spatial distribution of lesions along charged particle tracks. In recent years investigators have been barraged with the alternative narrative that this is instead due to 'qualitative' differences in the types of molecular lesions that each type of radiation produces.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Signaling by cytokines such as the interferons (IFNs) involves Janus kinases (JAKs) and signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) transcription factors. The beauty of the classical model of JAK-STAT signaling is its simplicity in that JAK-activated STATs in the nucleus are responsible for specific gene activation. The fact that many ligands, growth factors, and hormones use the same STAT transcription factors, but exert different functions at the level of the cell, tissue, and organ would suggest significant shortcomings in the classical model.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!