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Advances in Brief |
Radiation and Genome Stability Unit, Medical Research Council, Harwell, Oxfordshire OX11 0RD, United Kingdom
| ABSTRACT |
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| Introduction |
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-particles (3
, 4)
was shown to
persist for up to a year in vivo by transplantation of
-irradiated mouse bone marrow into syngeneic recipients
(5)
. A feature of the in vitro findings was
that more colonies exhibited instability than the number of clonogenic
cells traversed by the Poisson distribution of
-particles, and this
was due to interactions between irradiated and nonirradiated cells,
i.e., a bystander mechanism (6)
. Other examples
of
-particle-induced bystander effects (reviewed in Ref. 1
) have
been demonstrated by exposing cells to low fluences where, on
statistical grounds, not all cells are traversed or by irradiating
specific cells in a population using single particle microbeams. An
important aspect of using low fluences of
-particles is that it
models the environmentally relevant dose where most cells in a tissue
are not actually traversed by an
-particle. However, transplantation
studies are complicated by nonirradiated cells inevitably and
unavoidably being transferred with irradiated survivors (because of the
Poisson distribution of
-particles), and it is unclear whether any
or all chromosomal instability demonstrated in the previous
transplantation experiments (5)
might be attributed to a
bystander mechanism. Accordingly, to investigate the potential for a
bystander mechanism in vivo, we have transplanted mixtures
of nonirradiated cells with cells exposed to neutrons (a densely
ionizing radiation like
-particles) to model the mixture of
irradiated and nonirradiated cells in the previous
-irradiation
experiments. Mixing irradiated and nonirradiated cells has been used
successfully to demonstrate bystander effects (7)
. A sex
mismatch transplantation protocol using CBA/H mice and congenic CBA/H
mice that have a stable reciprocal chromosomal translocation
(8)
provided a three-way marker system allowing us to
distinguish not only host-derived cells from donor-derived cells but
also irradiated donor stem cell-derived cells from nonirradiated donor
stem cell-derived cells. Using this system, chromosomal
instability has been demonstrated in the progeny of nonirradiated stem
cells. The results provide the first evidence for a role of an in
vivo bystander mechanism in the induction of chromosomal
instability by ionizing radiation. | Materials and Methods |
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component. The mean energy of
the neutrons was 2.2 MeV, with a spectrum of energies up to 12 MeV.
Clonal Cytogenetic Analysis.
Immediately after irradiation, the cells were washed and resuspended,
and an in vitro clonogenic assay operationally defined as
the Type A colony-forming unit assay was used to obtain clones
of cells derived from members of the hemopoietic stem cell compartment
as described previously (3
, 5)
. Cytogenetic preparations
were obtained from individual colonies 710 days (1013 cell
divisions) after initiation of culture, and chromosomal aberrations
were classified from coded slides. Differences between the proportions
of aberrant cells in the colonies were analyzed by Fishers exact
test, and significant differences between the various classes of
aberration types were confirmed by a conditional binomial test.
Bone Marrow Transplantation.
A simple modification of a previously described protocol
(5)
was used in which nonirradiated, irradiated, or a
mixture of irradiated and nonirradiated male bone marrow cells were
transplanted into female recipients. Irradiated and nonirradiated cells
were distinguished by using marrow from CBA/H mice (40XY cells) and the
congenic CBA/H strain (40XYT6T6 cells) homozygous for the stable T6
reciprocal translocation between chromosome 14 and 15 (8)
.
Previous studies in our laboratory had demonstrated that
transplantation of cell suspensions containing 200 short-term
repopulating stem cells assayed in vivo as day-12
CFU-S4
correlated with long-term survival and donor repopulation in this mouse
strain (5)
. Therefore, to standardize the transplantation
procedure, the total number of cells injected for each treatment was
adjusted accordingly. In normal marrow, the incidence of CFU-S is
approximately 200/106 cells and
50/106 cells in O.5 Gy neutron-irradiated bone
marrow (25% surviving fraction). Irradiated and sham-irradiated cells
were placed on ice immediately after irradiation, mixed in
vitro within 10 min, and diluted appropriately, and 0.2-ml
aliquots were injected i.v. within 1 h of completion of
irradiation into 100 female recipients per treatment that had received
10 Gy X-irradiation less than 2 h before transplantation. All cell
suspensions were diluted 20-fold and assayed directly for CFU-S to
confirm that a standardized donor population had, in fact, been used
for the long-term repopulation studies. The cell mixture was chosen to
model the mixture of irradiated and nonirradiated cells in previous
studies of 0.5 Gy
-irradiated marrow. As described previously
(6)
, using Poisson statistics, the probability of cells of
a particular diameter being traversed by 0, 1, 2, 3, or more
-particles can be calculated from the particle fluence. From these
values and the coefficient of the exponential survival curve, the
proportions of cells in the surviving population that are irradiated
and not irradiated can be calculated. For convenience, we have used a
cell mixture reflecting a cell size of 8 µm because the clonogenic
cells detected by the type A colony-forming unit and CFU-S
assays have diameters in the range of 79 µm (3
, 9)
.
This is equivalent to 39% of clonogenic cells exposed to
-irradiation having been hit and survived and 61% of clonogenic
cells exposed to
-irradiation not having been hit.
Cytogenetic Analysis of Repopulated Bone Marrow.
At intervals of up to 1 year posttransplantation, femoral bone marrow
was obtained from three recipient mice per sample time, and direct
chromosome preparations were obtained from each animal. The donor
origin of cells for analysis was confirmed by the presence of the Y
chromosome, and chromosomal aberrations were scored from coded slides.
The progeny of irradiated (40XY) and nonirradiated (40XYT6T6) cells
were readily distinguished by the stable T6 reciprocal translocation
(Fig. 1)
. The data from the three samples were pooled. Differences between the
proportions of aberrant cells were analyzed by Fishers exact test,
and significant differences between the various classes of aberration
types were confirmed by a conditional binomial test.
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| Results and Discussion |
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-particles (3
, 6)
. Clonal aberrations were not seen in
any of the colonies, but this is not unexpected, given the number of
colonies studied, and it highlights the general finding that the
frequency of induction of instability is considerably greater than the
frequency of stable chromosome translocations and deletions and
mutations at specific loci induced by direct effects of ionizing
radiation (2)
.
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-particle-induced chromosomal
instability (3, 4, 5)
and may be explained by the more
effective recognition and removal of abnormal cells in vivo
than in cell culture systems. Such differences highlight the importance
of in vivo studies particularly when considering the
potential health effects of inducible instability because mechanisms
that have evolved to recognize and remove damaged cells in
vivo would be expected to reduce the frequency of any pathological
consequences relative to the high level of expression of instability.
After transplantation of a mixture of irradiated and nonirradiated bone
marrow, chromosomal instability was demonstrated in 3.6% of the 40XY
cells; i.e., in cells derived from transplanted, irradiated
stem cells (Table 3)
. Thus, comparing the results with those in Table 2
, the induction of
chromosomal instability in 40XY cells was independent of the total
number of 40XY cells irradiated because the frequency of cells
with unstable aberrations was the same after irradiating 39% (3.6 ±
1.1) or 100% (3.2 ± 0.6) of the cells (P = 0.96).
Furthermore, at all times posttransplantation, chromosomal instability
was also demonstrated in cells carrying the T6 marker, i.e.,
in cells derived from the nonirradiated, transplanted stem cells. The
overall frequency of 40XYT6T6 cells expressing instability (2.2%),
although lower than that in the 40XY cells, was significantly greater
than that in controls (0.38%) transplanted with nonirradiated 40XYT6T6
marrow (P = 0.0054).
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Currently, the mechanisms underlying the induction and persistence of the various manifestation of radiation-induced genomic instability are not understood, and the induction of chromosomal instability in vivo by a bystander mechanism adds further complexity because the mechanism underlying bystander effects also is not understood. Because some studies of bystander effects implicate gap junction-mediated intercellular communication in transmitting bystander signals immediately after irradiation in vitro (15 , 16) , and others have implicated extracellular cytokine-like factors that are able to increase intracellular levels of reactive oxygen species in nonirradiated cells (17 , 18) , it is possible that more than one mechanism is involved and that this mechanism may be a function of the cell type being studied. The demonstration of instability in single cell suspensions of primary hemopoietic cells by a bystander mechanism (6) would argue against a gap junction mechanism for the initiation of the process in these particular cell types, although we do not yet know whether the instability phenotype can be induced by medium obtained from irradiated cells. However, in hemopoietic cultures expressing induced genomic instability, increases in intracellular oxidants and oxidative DNA base damage have also been demonstrated (19) . These various findings are consistent with oxidative processes contributing, at least in part, to the expression of instability in hemopoietic cells. Because similar oxidative effects have been demonstrated in cultures of X-ray-irradiated cells (19) , and chromosomal instability can be demonstrated in the progeny of X-ray-irradiated hemopoietic cells, (20) there is no reason to assume that bystander-induced chromosomal instability is restricted to densely ionizing radiations. Thus, it is likely that a medium-transmitted mechanism similar to that described by Lehnert and colleagues (17 , 18) for bystander-mediated short-term effects may be able to induce long-term chromosomal instability. The study was designed using different recipients at different time points to identify evidence for a bystander effect and not to follow the pathological consequences in the hemopoietic systems of a large cohort of individual animals. However, this first demonstration of a link between a bystander effect of ionizing radiation and inducible genomic instability in vivo clearly poses major challenges to widely held views concerning radiation-induced DNA damage and the mechanisms underlying health consequences of radiation exposures because current models for initiation of radiation-induced malignant transformation consider only lesions in irradiated cells.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Supported by The Medical Research Council, the
Leukaemia Research Fund, and the United Kingdom Coordinating Committee
on Cancer Research. ![]()
2 Present address: University of Dundee,
Department of Molecular and Cellular Pathology, Ninewells Hospital and
Medical School, Dundee DD1 9SY, Scotland, United Kingdom. ![]()
3 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at University of Dundee, Department of Molecular and
Cellular Pathology, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, Dundee DD1
9SY, Scotland, United Kingdom. Phone: 01382-632169; Fax: 01382-633952;
E-mail: e.g.wright{at}dundee.ac.uk ![]()
4 The abbreviation used is: CFU-S, spleen
colony-forming unit. ![]()
Received 5/30/00. Accepted 8/29/00.
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