Molecular alterations in tumorigenic human bronchial and breast epithelial cells induced by high let radiation

Hei, T.K.; Zhao, Y.L.; Roy, D.; Piao, C.Q.; Calaf, G.; Hall, E.J.

Abstract

Carcinogenesis is a multi-stage process with sequence of genetic events governing the phenotypic expression of a series of transformation steps leading to the development of metastatic cancer. In the present study, immortalized human bronchial (BEP2D) and breast (MCF-10F) cells were irradiated with graded doses of either 150 keV/μm alpha particles or 1 GeV/nucleon 56Fe ions. Transformed cells developed through a series of successive steps before becoming tumorigenic in nude mice. Cell fusion studies indicated that radiation-induced tumorigenic phenotype in BEP2D cells could be completely suppressed by fusion with non-tumorigenic BEP2D cells. The differential expressions of known genes between tumorigenic bronchial and breast cells induced by alpha particles and their respective control cultures were compared using cDNA expression array. Among the 11 genes identified to be differentially expressed in BEP2D cells, three (DCC, DNA-PK and p21CIPI) were shown to be consistently down-regulated by 2 to 4 fold in all the 5 tumor cell lines examined. In contrast, their expressions in the fusion cell lines were comparable to control BEP2D cells. Similarly, expression levels of a series of genes were found to be altered in a step-wise manner among tumorigenic MCF-10F cells. The results are highly suggestive that functional alterations of these genes may be causally related to the carcinogenic process.

Más información

Título de la Revista: ADVANCES IN SPACE RESEARCH
Volumen: 27
Número: 2
Editorial: ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2001
Página de inicio: 411
Página final: 419
DOI:

10.1016/S0273-1177(01)00009-6

Notas: ISI