11 research outputs found
Chromosomal radiosensitivity of HIV positive individuals
Purpose: Radiosensitivity in relation to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) status is important in South Africa as the prevalence of HIV infections is high. In this study the in vitro chromosomal radiosensitivity of HIV positive individuals was investigated and compared with that of HIV negative individuals.
Materials and methods: Blood samples from 59 HIV positive and 39 HIV negative individuals were exposed in vitro to doses of 6MV X-rays ranging from 1-4 Gy. Chromosomal radiosensitivity was assessed with the micronucleus assay. Micronuclei are a measure of chromosomal damage and were quantified in at least 500 binucleated lymphoblasts (BN) per sample. Un-irradiated control samples from each donor were also analysed.
Results: In 47% of HIV positive individuals difficulties with cell stimulation by adding phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) to blood cultures were noticed which resulted in insufficient yield of BN for microscopic analysis. Micronuclei frequencies were consistently higher in irradiated lymphocytes obtained from HIV positive individuals compared to that observed in cells from HIV negative donors. Data for both groups were fitted to the linear-quadratic equation Y = alpha D + beta D-2 where Y is the number of micronuclei in 500 binucleated cells and D is the dose in Gy. The fitted parameters for respectively HIV positive and HIV negative lymphocytes are alpha -80.17 Gy(-1), beta - 14 Gy(-2) and alpha - 54.5 Gy(-1), beta - 16.2 Gy(-2). The confidence ellipses of these parameters are separated indicating that the increase in radiosensitivity is statistically significant.
Conclusion: T-lymphocytes of HIV infected individuals were considerably more sensitive to X-rays compared to that of HIV negative donors. This may have implications for normal tissue tolerance during radiotherapy as well as for the radiological health of radiation workers
Reserve stem cell population in intestinal crypts found to be consistently small by analysis of in vivo clonogenic assays with a biomathematical dynamic model.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The high plasticity of the intestinal epithelium is maintained by a resilient reserve stem cell population, whose extent and biology are a matter of ongoing debate. The in vivo clonogenic assay (IVCA), presents a well established and efficient analysis of radiation insult to the intestinal crypts. However, we found that inadequate mathematical analysis over the last four decades led to systematic errors and contradictory results in estimates of radio-sensitivity and size of the reserve stem cell pool. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We devised a refinement of the IVCA via development of a biomathematical model that delivers a full statistical dynamic description of epithelial radiation injury and subsequent regeneration. We validated the model against cellular and crypt distribution statistics obtained from IVCA experiments and through systematic re-analysis of experimental data from 27 publications. RESULTS: A full dynamic description of the evolution of stem cell niche population statistics is obtained. A systematic re-analysis reveals a consistent clonogenic content of the crypt of 31±6 cells. The stem cell reserve manifests to be, contrary to prior predictions, radio-resistant: α=(0.22±0.04) Gy-1. CONCLUSION: We established a precision tool for the quantitative analysis of radiation insult to the intestinal crypts, which we employ to show that the reserve stem cell population is small, radio-resistant, and remarkably immutable against a large variety of interventions. The increased resolution of the model allows not only a reduction of the number of animals by about 75%, but also to quantify experimentally the influence of additional agents on damage and on regeneration of the stem cell niche
Volume-dependent dose-response of the intestinal stem cell niche and lymphoid tissue.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Plasticity of the intestinal stem cell compartment in response to radiation injury is regulated by a stem cell niche. We present here the first experimental observations of a dose-volume effect of the intestinal stem cell niche and of the solitary intestinal lymphoid tissues (SILT). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Regeneration of intestinal crypts in mice was studied following irradiation of millimetre-size jejunal sections with single doses of 6 to 24 Gy and compared to total body irradiation (TBI). The statistical distribution of cells per crypt was scored and regressed to a biomathematical model. The number of SILTs was scored for different doses and field sizes and crypt regeneration was correlated with SILT proximity. RESULTS: We observed a differential dose-response of the intestinal stem cell niche at the centres of the irradiated sections, but only for field sizes below 10 mm. Irradiation of 5 mm jejunum results in an increase in crypt survival by up to an order of magnitude, compared to TBI. Distributions of cell-per-crypt numbers and comparison to biomathematical modelling suggest that these observations stem from a field size-dependent regeneration rate. The density of SILTs also exhibits a volume-dependent dose-response and increased crypt survival correlates with a proximity to SILTs. CONCLUSION: Our findings present the first observation of a field-size dependent dose-response of the intestinal stem cell niche. Its regeneration process does apparently not rely on distant radiation-sensitive resources of the organism, such as the bone marrow. Yet, our observations suggest that the niche interacts with intact tissue in millimetres distance, leading to faster crypt regeneration. The field-size dependent dose-response of SILTs posits a role of the immune system on the dose-volume effect
A semi-automated micronucleus-centromere assay to assess low-dose radiation exposure in human lymphocytes
Purpose: The in vitro micronucleus (MN) assay is a reliable method to assess radiation-induced chromosomal damage in human peripheral blood lymphocytes. It is used to evaluate in vivo radiation over-exposure and to assess in vitro chromosomal radiosensitivity. A limitation of the MN assay is the relatively high and variable spontaneous MN frequency that restricts low-dose estimation to doses of about 0.3 gray (Gy). As radiation-induced MN mainly contain acentric fragments and spontaneous MN originate from lagging chromosomes, both MN types can be distinguished from each other by using fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) with a pan-centromeric probe. The aim of this study was to investigate if the sensitivity, reliability and processing time of the MN assay can be enhanced by combining the automated MN assay with pan-centromere scoring.
Materials and methods: Blood samples from 10 healthy donors were irradiated in vitro with low doses of gamma-rays. Dose response curves were determined for fully-automated and semi-automated MN scoring and semi-automated scoring of centromere negative MN (MNCM-).
Results: A good correlation was obtained between fully-automated and semi-automated MN scoring (r<SU2</SU == 0.9973) and between fully automated MN scoring and semi-automated scoring of MNCM- (r<SU2</SU == 0.998). With the Wilcoxon test, a significant p value was obtained between 0 and 0.2 Gy for the fully-automated MN analysis, between 0 and 0.1 Gy for semi-automated MN analysis and between 0 and 0.05 Gy for semi-automated scoring of MNCM-.
Conclusion: The semi-automated micronucleus-centromere assay combines high-speed MN analysis with a more accurate assessment in the low-dose range which makes it of special interest for large-scale radiation applications
The influence of blood storage time and general anaesthesia on chromosomal radiosensitivity assessment
The micronucleus assay (MN assay) is a well-established assay in genetic toxicology, biomonitoring of mutagen-exposed populations and chromosomal radiosensitivity testing. To evaluate the effect of storage time on the chromosomal radiosensitivity assessment in lymphocytes, micronuclei (MN) yields in blood samples received and processed on the same day were compared with MN yields obtained when blood cultures were set up 24 and 48h after blood sampling. Furthermore, the influence of general anaesthesia on MN and binucleated cells (BN) yields in the MN assay was considered. Blood samples of 10 healthy donors were irradiated and blood cultures were set up during the same day of blood sampling or with a delay of 24 or 48h. The MN assay was also performed on two blood samples from 60 women undergoing breast surgery. The first blood sample was taken before general anaesthesia and the second sample, 2h after anaesthesia induction. Fifty percent of the blood samples were transported to the cytogenetics lab within 2h while the other 50% reached the lab after 24h. The results of this study show a decrease in BN and an increase in MN yields with increasing storage time before irradiation and setting up of the MN assay for both healthy controls and patients. The administration of general anaesthesia in patients resulted in lower BN yields, higher spontaneous MN yields but no differences in radiation-induced MN yields. In conclusion, this study indicates that the time between blood sampling and the in vitro irradiation of the samples for the MN assay influences the MN yields. Delays of more than 24h should be avoided. To assess chromosomal radiosensitivity in patients, blood samples should be taken before induction of general anaesthesia as anaesthesia can have an impact on the reliability of the MN results