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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Radiation-induced apoptosis in human sarcoma and glioma cell lines.

Six human soft-tissue sarcoma and 14 glioma cell lines, exhibiting considerable differences in radioresponsiveness and histological grade of differentiation of the parental tumour, were examined with respect to apoptosis development after irradiation with 60Co gamma-rays. After test doses of 6 and 25 Gy, significant changes characteristic of apoptosis occurring within 6 to 30 hr were exhibited by only 2 differentiated sarcoma cell lines, EL7 and ESS2. The characteristic internucleosomal fragmentation of DNA was detected as early as 6 hr after exposure of subconfluent monolayer cultures to 6 Gy. It was limited to cells that had detached from the culture plate, whereas adherent cells showed random degradation of DNA, namely after higher doses (25Gy) or longer incubation times (30 hr). As assessed by fluorescence microscopy of unfixed cultures stained with Hoechst 33342 and propidium iodide, the proportion of cells showing apoptotic bodies in non-irradiated controls was < 0.1% and 0.3% for EL7 and ESS2, respectively. The dose-response relationship for apoptosis was determined at 9 hr post-irradiation. After 2 Gy, the percentage of apoptotic cells was elevated to 3.4% in EL7 and 4.5% in ESS2 cultures. Saturation was obtained above 6 Gy, with 8.4% apoptosis in EL7 and 15% in ESS2 after 25 Gy. Taken together, rapid ionizing-radiation-induced apoptosis seems to be limited to a subgroup of sarcomas and is unlikely to occur in gliomas.[1]

References

  1. Radiation-induced apoptosis in human sarcoma and glioma cell lines. Stapper, N.J., Stuschke, M., Sak, A., Stüben, G. Int. J. Cancer (1995) [Pubmed]
 
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