Acta Medica Nagasakiensia
Print ISSN : 0001-6055
Contribution of Bystander Effects in Radiation Induced Genotoxicity
Hongning ZHOUMasao SUZUKIRudranath PERSAUDJoseph GILLISPIEGerhard RANDERS-PEHRSONTom K. HEI
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2005 Volume 50 Issue Supplement1 Pages S73-S77

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Abstract

The controversial use of a linear, no threshold extrapolation model for low dose risk assessment is based on the accepted dogma that the deleterious effects of ionizing radiation such as mutagenesis and carcinogenesis are attributable mainly to direct damage to DNA. However, this extropolation was challenged by the recent reports on the bystander phenomenon. The bystander effect contributes to this debate by implying that the biological effects of low doses, where not all cells are traversed by a charged particle, are amplified by the transfer of factors to un-irradiated neighbors. This interested phenomenon implies that a linear extrapolation of risks from high to low doses may underestimate rather than over estimate low dose risks. Together with some radiation-induced phenomena such as adaptive response and genomic instability, the radiobiological response at low doses is likely to be a complex interplay among many factors.

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© 2005 by Nagasaki University School of Medicine
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