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1 March 2001 The Bystander Effect in Radiation Oncogenesis: I. Transformation in C3H 10T½ Cells In Vitro can be Initiated in the Unirradiated Neighbors of Irradiated Cells
S. G. Sawant, G. Randers-Pehrson, C. R. Geard, D. J. Brenner and, E. J. Hall
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Abstract

Sawant, S. G., Randers-Pehrson, G., Geard, C. R., Brenner, D. J. and Hall, E. J. The Bystander Effect in Radiation Oncogenesis: I. Transformation in C3H 10T½ Cells In Vitro can be Initiated in the Unirradiated Neighbors of Irradiated Cells.

It has long been accepted that radiation-induced genetic effects require that DNA be hit and damaged directly by the radiation. Recently, evidence has accumulated that in cell populations exposed to low doses of α particles, biological effects occur in a larger proportion of cells than are estimated to have been traversed by α particles. The end points observed include chromosome aberrations, mutations and gene expression. The development of a fast single-cell microbeam now makes it possible to expose a precisely known proportion of cells in a population to exactly defined numbers of α particles, and to assay for oncogenic transformation. The single-cell microbeam delivered no, one, two, four or eight α particles through the nuclei of all or just 10% of C3H 10T½ cells. We show that (a) more cells can be inactivated than were actually traversed by α particles and (b) when 10% of the cells on a dish are exposed to α particles, the resulting frequency of induced transformation is not less than that observed when every cell on the dish is exposed to the same number of α particles. These observations constitute evidence suggesting a bystander effect, i.e., that unirradiated cells are responding to damage induced in irradiated cells. This bystander effect in a biological system of relevance to carcinogenesis could have significant implications for risk estimation for low-dose radiation.

S. G. Sawant, G. Randers-Pehrson, C. R. Geard, D. J. Brenner and, and E. J. Hall "The Bystander Effect in Radiation Oncogenesis: I. Transformation in C3H 10T½ Cells In Vitro can be Initiated in the Unirradiated Neighbors of Irradiated Cells," Radiation Research 155(3), 397-401, (1 March 2001). https://doi.org/10.1667/0033-7587(2001)155[0397:TBEIRO]2.0.CO;2
Received: 18 July 2000; Accepted: 1 November 2000; Published: 1 March 2001
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