Lack of Sensitivity of Primary Fanconi's Anemia Fibroblasts to UV and Ionizing Radiation
Author(s) -
Reinhard Kalb,
Michael Duerr,
Matthias Wagner,
Sabine Herterich,
M Gross,
Martin Digweed,
Hans Joenje,
Holger Hoehn,
Detlev Schindler
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
radiation research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1938-5404
pISSN - 0033-7587
DOI - 10.1667/rr3138
Subject(s) - fanconi anemia , ionizing radiation , ataxia telangiectasia , radiation sensitivity , radiosensitivity , fibroblast , xeroderma pigmentosum , complementation , biology , cell culture , microbiology and biotechnology , dna damage , dna repair , genetics , irradiation , dna , medicine , mutant , radiation therapy , physics , gene , nuclear physics
Clinical observations and theoretical considerations suggest some degree of radiosensitivity in Fanconi's anemia (FA), but experimental evidence remains controversial. We tested the sensitivity of primary skin fibroblast cultures from all known FA complementation groups to ionizing radiation and ultraviolet light using conventional cell growth and colony formation assays. In contrast to previous studies, and because FA fibroblasts grow and clone poorly at ambient oxygen, we performed our sensitivity tests under hypoxic cell culture conditions. Fibroblast strains from healthy donors served as negative controls and those from patients with ataxia telangiectasia (AT) and Cockayne syndrome (CS) as positive controls. We observed interstrain variation but no systematic difference in the response of FA and non-FA control fibroblasts to ionizing radiation. After exposure to UV radiation, only complementation group A, G and D2 strains displayed values for colony formation EC50 that were intermediate between those for the negative and positive controls. Because of considerable interstrain variation, minor alterations of the response of individual FA strains to ionizing and UV radiation should be interpreted with caution and should not be taken as evidence for genotype-specific sensitivities of primary FA fibroblasts. All together, our data indicate neither systematic nor major sensitivities of primary FA fibroblast cultures of any complementation group grown under hypoxic cell culture conditions to ionizing or UV radiation.
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