Adaptive Response Against Spontaneous Neoplastic Transformation In Vitro Induced by Ionizing Radiation
Author(s) -
Ph.D. J. Leslie Redpath
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/820345
Subject(s) - ionizing radiation , neoplastic transformation , transformation (genetics) , adaptive response , in vitro , relative biological effectiveness , radiation , irradiation , biology , nuclear medicine , physics , computer science , cancer research , cancer , medicine , carcinogenesis , optics , genetics , gene , nuclear physics
The goal of this project was to establish a dose response curve for radiation-induced neoplastic transformation of HeLa x skin fibroblast human hybrid cells in vitro under experimental conditions were an adaptive response, if it were induced, would have an opportunity to be expressed. During the first two years of the grant an exhaustive series of experiments were performed and the resulting data were reported at the 2000 Annual Meeting of the Radiation Research Society and then Subsequently published. The data showed that an adaptive response against spontaneous neoplastic transformation was seen up to doses of 10cGy of Cs-137 gamma rays. At dose of 30, 50 and 100 cGy the transformation frequencies were above background. This indicated that for this system, under the specific experimental conditions used, there was a threshold of somewhere between 10 and 30 cGy. The results also indicated some unexpected, though very interesting, correlations with relative risk estimates made from human epidemiologic studies
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