» Articles » PMID: 10825754

Induction and Rejoining of DNA Double-strand Breaks in Bladder Tumor Cells

Overview
Journal Radiat Res
Specialties Genetics
Radiology
Date 2000 May 29
PMID 10825754
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The induction and rejoining of radiation-induced double-strand breaks (DSBs) in cells of six bladder tumor cell lines (T24, UM-UC-3, TCC-SUP, RT112, J82, HT1376) were measured using the neutral comet assay. Radiation dose-response curves (0-60 Gy) showed damage (measured as mean tail moment) for five of the cell lines in the same rank order as cell survival (measured over 0-10 Gy), with the least damage in the most radioresistant cell line. Damage induction correlated well with clonogenic survival at high doses (SF10) for all six cell lines. At the clinically relevant dose of 2 Gy, correlation was good for four cell lines but poor for two (TCC-SUP and T24). The rejoining process had a fast and slow component for all cell lines. The rate of these two components of DNA repair did not correlate with cell survival. However, the time taken to reduce the amount of DNA damage to preirradiated control levels correlated positively with cell survival at 10 Gy but not 2 Gy; radioresistant cells rejoined the induced DSBs to preirradiation control levels more quickly than the radiosensitive cells. Although the results show good correlation between SF10 and DSBs for all six cell lines, the lack of correlation with SF2 for TCC-SUP and T24 cells would suggest that a predictive test should be carried out at the clinically relevant dose. At present the neutral comet assay cannot achieve this.

Citing Articles

Ecto-5'-nucleotidase/CD73 contributes to the radiosensitivity of T24 human bladder cancer cell line.

Dietrich F, Figueiro F, Filippi-Chiela E, Cappellari A, Rockenbach L, Tremblay A J Cancer Res Clin Oncol. 2018; 144(3):469-482.

PMID: 29305710 DOI: 10.1007/s00432-017-2567-3.


Nested PCR for mtDNA-4977-bp deletion and comet assay for DNA damage - a combined method for radiosensitivity evaluation of tumor cells.

Li J, Wang Y, Du L, Xu C, Cao J, Wang Q Oncol Lett. 2014; 7(4):1083-1087.

PMID: 24944673 PMC: 3961259. DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.1819.


Relationship between reactive oxygen species and sodium-selenite-induced DNA damage in HepG2 cells.

Zou Y, Niu P, Gong Z, Yang J, Yuan J, Wu T Front Med China. 2014; 1(3):327-32.

PMID: 24573876 DOI: 10.1007/s11684-007-0063-x.


In vitro effects of Cyberknife-driven intermittent irradiation on glioblastoma cell lines.

Canazza A, de Grazia U, Fumagalli L, Brait L, Ghielmetti F, Fariselli L Neurol Sci. 2011; 32(4):579-88.

PMID: 21301910 DOI: 10.1007/s10072-011-0485-8.


Overexpressed heat shock protein 70 protects cells against DNA damage caused by ultraviolet C in a dose-dependent manner.

Niu P, Liu L, Gong Z, Tan H, Wang F, Yuan J Cell Stress Chaperones. 2006; 11(2):162-9.

PMID: 16817322 PMC: 1484517. DOI: 10.1379/csc-175r.1.