Radiation Sensitivity of Cell Strains from Families with Genetic Disorders Predisposing to Radiation-induced Cancer

John B. Little, Hatsumi Nagasawa, Warren W. Nichols, Philip Troilo, Louise C. Strong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

49 Scopus citations

Abstract

This investigation was designed to test the hypothesis that skin fibroblasts from patients with genetic disorders characterized by hypersusceptibility to X-ray-induced cancer are sensitive to the cytotoxic or clastogenic effects of X-irradiation in vitro. Cell strains were established from 28 specifically ascertained patients from families with nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome, retinoblastoma, or other disorders apparently predisposing to radiation-induced cancer. These included 10 patients with a clear personal or family history of radiation-induced tumors. These cell strains were examined for the cytotoxic effects of X-irradiation in 3 distinct series of separate, blinded experiments, along with a group of 9 similarly coded cell bank controls. Cells from 11 of these patients and 6 controls were studied for sensitivity to X-ray-induced chromosomal aberrations. Seven of the 37 cell strains were moderately hypersensitive to radiation-induced cell killing; 2 of these were from patients with radiation-induced tumors and 1 was a cell bank control. These results suggest that such isolated cases of hypersensitivity probably do not relate to the underlying genetic disorder. Overall, the X-ray response of cells from affected individuals in this study showed no systematic difference from that of cells from nonaffected relatives or cell bank controls for either cytotoxicity or clastogenicity.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)4705-4714
Number of pages10
JournalCancer Research
Volume49
Issue number17
StatePublished - Sep 15 1989

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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