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INDUCTION OF DIRECT AND INDIRECT SINGLE‐STRAND BREAKS IN HUMAN CELL DNA BY FAR‐ AND NEAR‐ULTRAVIOLET RADIATIONS: ACTION SPECTRUM AND MECHANISMS
Author(s) -
Peak Meyrick J.,
Peak Jennifer G.,
Carnes Bruce A.
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
photochemistry and photobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.818
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1751-1097
pISSN - 0031-8655
DOI - 10.1111/j.1751-1097.1987.tb05390.x
Subject(s) - action spectrum , irradiation , dna , dna damage , radiation , bacillus subtilis , pyrimidine dimer , biophysics , ultraviolet , wavelength , biology , chemistry , bacteria , optics , physics , genetics , nuclear physics
— An action spectrum for the immediate induction in DNA of single‐strand breaks (SSBs, frank breaks plus alkali‐labile sites) in human P3 teratoma cells in culture by monochromatic 254‐, 270‐, 290‐, 313‐, 334‐, 365‐, and 405‐nm radiation is described. The cells were held at +0.5d̀C during irradiation and were Iysed immediately for alkaline sedimentation analysis following the irradiation treatments. Linear fluence responses were observed over the fluence ranges studied for all energies. Irradiation of the cells in a D 2 O environment (compared with the normal H 2 O environment) did not alter the rate of induction of SSBs by 290‐nm radiation, whereas the D 2 O environment enhanced the induction of SSBs by 365‐ and 405‐nm irradiation. Analysis of the relative efficiencies for the induction of SSBs, corrected for quantum efficiency and cellular shielding, revealed a spectrum that coincided closely with nucleic acid absorption below 313 nm. At longer wavelengths, the plot of relative efficiency vs . wavelength contained a minor shoulder in the same wavelength region as that observed in a previously obtained action spectrum for stationary phase Bacillus subtilis cells. Far‐UV radiation induced few breaks relative to pyrimidine dimers, whereas in the near‐UV region of radiation, SSBs account for a significant proportion of the lesions relative to dimers, with a maximum number of SSBs per lethal event occurring at 365‐nm radiation.