Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1877488 Applied Radiation and Isotopes 2016 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The chronic exposure to IR is a factor that may be hazardous to health.•The susceptibility of a biological system (HeLa) to ionizing radiation (IR) was study.•Exposed to 6, 60 mSv/90 s shown alterations nuclear, junctions and actin microfilaments.•Our investigation, reflects the molecular mechanisms of radiation toxicity.•And provides the basis for the improvement of clinical radiation in cancer treatment.

Acute or chronic exposure to ionizing radiation is a factor that may be hazardous to health. It has been reported that exposure to low doses of radiation (less than 50 mSv/year) and subsequently exposure to high doses produces greater effects in people. It has been reported that people who have been exposed to low doses of radiation (less than 50 mSv/year) and subsequently are exposed to high doses, have greater effects. However, at a molecular and biochemical level, it is an unknown alteration. This study, analyzes the susceptibility of a biological system (HeLa ATCC CCL-2 human cervix cancer cell line) to ionizing radiation (6 and 60 mSv/90 s). Our research considers multiple variables such as: total protein profile, mitochondrial metabolic activity (XTT assay), cell viability (Trypan blue exclusion assay), cytoskeleton (actin microfilaments), nuclei (DAPI), and genomic DNA. The results indicate, that cells exposed to ionizing radiation show structural alterations in nuclear phenotype and aneuploidy, further disruption in the tight junctions and consequently on the distribution of actin microfilaments. Similar alterations were observed in cells treated with a genotoxic agent (200 μM H2O2/1 h). In conclusion, this multi-criteria assessment enables precise comparisons of the effects of radiation between various line cells. However, it is necessary to determine stress markers for integration of the effects of ionizing radiation.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Radiation
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