نتایج جستجو برای: bystander

تعداد نتایج: 4378  

2017
Humaira Aziz Sawal Kashif Asghar Matthias Bureik Nasir Jalal

The radiation-induced bystander effect (RIBE) is the initiation of biological end points in cells (bystander cells) that are not directly traversed by an incident-radiation track, but are in close proximity to cells that are receiving the radiation. RIBE has been indicted of causing DNA damage via oxidative stress, besides causing direct damage, inducing tumorigenesis, producing micronuclei, an...

2016
Nina Thakkar Rivera Shari L Kumar Rohit K Bhandari Sunil D Kumar

The American Heart Association reports the annual incidence of out-of-hospital cardiopulmonary arrests (OHCA) is greater than 300,000 with a survival rate of 9.5%. Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) saves one life for every 30, with a 10% decrease in survival associated with every minute of delay in CPR initiation. Bystander CPR and training vary widely by region. We conducted a retr...

Journal: :Environmental science & technology 2012
V W Y Choi A L Y Cheung S H Cheng K N Yu

We report data showing that embryos of the zebrafish, Danio rerio, at 1.5 h post fertilization (hpf) subjected to a low-dose alpha-particle irradiation can release a stress signal into the water, which can be communicated to unirradiated bystander zebrafish embryos sharing the same water medium to induce a hormetic effect in the bystander embryos. Hormetic responses are characterized as biphasi...

Journal: :Carcinogenesis 2010
Olga Kovalchuk Franz J Zemp Jody N Filkowski Alvin M Altamirano Jennifer S Dickey Gloria Jenkins-Baker Stephen A Marino David J Brenner William M Bonner Olga A Sedelnikova

The radiation-induced bystander effect (RIBE) is a phenomenon whereby unexposed cells exhibit molecular symptoms of stress exposure when adjacent or nearby cells are traversed by ionizing radiation (IR). Recent data suggest that RIBE may be epigenetically mediated by microRNAs (miRNAs), which are small regulatory molecules that target messenger RNA transcripts for translational inhibition. Here...

Journal: :Radiation research 2006
Zhengfeng Liu Carmel E Mothersill Fiona E McNeill Fiona M Lyng Soo Hyun Byun Colin B Seymour William V Prestwich

The existence of radiation-induced bystander effects mediated by diffusible factors is now accepted, but the mechanisms and precise behavior at low doses remain unclear. We exposed cells to gamma-ray doses in the range 0.04 mGy-5 Gy, harvested the culture medium, and transferred it to unirradiated reporter cells. Calcium fluxes and clonogenic survival were measured in the recipients. We show ev...

Journal: :Ethnicity & disease 2009
Peter C Benson Marc Eckstein Christian D McClung Sean O Henderson

BACKGROUND Bystander CPR (BCPR) has been demonstrated to improve rates of return of spontaneous circulation, survival to hospital admission, and quality of life in survivors. While previous studies have shown that African Americans are less likely to receive BCPR than Caucasians even after adjusting for variables such as socioeconomic status, BCPR rates in Latinos have not been reported. OBJE...

Journal: :Journal of mathematical biology 2017
Oluwole Olobatuyi Gerda de Vries Thomas Hillen

We develop and analyze a reaction-diffusion model to investigate the dynamics of the lifespan of a bystander signal emitted when cells are exposed to radiation. Experimental studies by Mothersill and Seymour 1997, using malignant epithelial cell lines, found that an emitted bystander signal can still cause bystander effects in cells even 60 h after its emission. Several other experiments have a...

Journal: :Journal of radiation research 2009
Kevin M Prise Giuseppe Schettino Boris Vojnovic Oleg Belyakov Chunlin Shao

Microbeams have undergone a renaissance since their introduction and early use in the mid 60s. Recent advances in imaging, software and beam delivery have allowed rapid technological developments in microbeams for use in a range of experimental studies. The resurgence in the use of microbeams since the mid 90s has coincided with major changes in our understanding of how radiation interacts with...

2015
Vasily A. Yakovlev

Cells that are not irradiated but are affected by "stress signal factors" released from irradiated cells are called bystander cells. These cells, as well as directly irradiated ones, express DNA damage-related proteins and display excess DNA damage, chromosome aberrations, mutations, and malignant transformation. This phenomenon has been studied widely in the past 20 years, since its first desc...

Journal: :Radiation research 2001
D J Brenner J B Little R K Sachs

There is strong evidence that biological response to ionizing radiation has a contribution from unirradiated "bystander" cells that respond to signals emitted by irradiated cells. We discuss here an approach incorporating a radiobiological bystander response, superimposed on a direct response due to direct energy deposition in cell nuclei. A quantitative model based on this approach is describe...

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