Analysis method of cellular stress caused by intermediate dose‐rate irradiation using a cell lysate array technique

Author:

Morishima Nobuhiro1ORCID,Ogata Hiromitsu2,Magae Junji3,Ito Yoshihiro14,Kobayashi Junya5

Affiliation:

1. Nano Medical Engineering Laboratory, Cluster for Pioneering Research RIKEN Wako Japan

2. Faculty of Nutrition Kagawa Nutrition University Sakado Japan

3. Magae Bioscience Institute Tsukuba Japan

4. Emergent Bioengineering Materials Research Team RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science Wako Japan

5. Department of Radiological Sciences, School of Health Sciences at Narita International University of Health and Welfare Narita Japan

Abstract

AbstractIonizing radiation damages DNA and may lead to the development of cancer. Irradiation also generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) which cause damage to various biological molecules. Relatively low dose‐rate irradiation causes less damage. However, the damage and its effects on cell fate are difficult to evaluate. To develop a method to analyze the damage and accompanying changes in physiology in cells irradiated by γ‐rays at a relatively low dose‐rate, we used the protein array technique to quantify marker proteins involved in the stress response and the regulation of cell growth and death. This method enabled efficient analyses of many replicates of experimental data on cell lysate samples. We detected relatively small changes in the levels of these proteins in the irradiated cells. Changes in protein levels suggested ROS production and DNA damage as well as cell cycle retardation and the progression of cellular senescence. Thus, our approach shows promise for analyzing the biological effects of relatively low dose‐rate irradiation.

Funder

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

National Institute for Fusion Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Genetics

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