Effects of generational low dose-rate Cs internal exposure in descendant mice.

Int J Radiat Biol

Professor Emeritus, Division of Safety Management, Radioisotope Research Center, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.

Published: October 2024

To quantitatively investigate the effects of chronic low-dose internal exposure to Cesium-137 on DNA damage, carcinogenicity, and offspring over multiple generations. The potential genetic risk in humans was predicted based on next-generation murine mutation rates to confirm the reasonableness of the current Cesium-137 dose limits for food. Cesium-137 (100 Bq/mL) was provided in drinking water to A/J mice, facilitating chronic, low-dose, low-dose-rate internal exposure through sibling mating over 25 generations (G25). The A/J mice were compared with a control strain with the same origin ancestry (no Cesium-137 water) for DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), oxidative stress, chromosome aberrations, micronucleus test results, whole genome analysis, carcinogenicity, tumor growth rate, and immune competence. Compared to the control group, DNA DSBs and oxidative stress were significantly increased in the Cesium-137 group. However, no significant differences were observed between the groups regarding chromosome aberration, micronuclei, or the whole genome sequence mutation analysis. Although the carcinogenic rate did not differ between the groups, the rate of tumor growth was significantly suppressed in the Cesium-137 group. The anti-tumor cytokine trend in the Cesium-137 group likely contributed to this effect. No pathological or genetic effects were observed in the offspring of mice drinking water containing 100 Bq/mL Cesium-137 after G25. The contribution of low dose-rate radiation to carcinogenicity was not additive but growth-inhibitory. Although the negative data are not conclusive, these findings are deemed highly reliable.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09553002.2024.2400521DOI Listing

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