نتایج جستجو برای: bystander effect

تعداد نتایج: 1644910  

Journal: :Dose-response : a publication of International Hormesis Society 2009
Rohin Saroya Richard Smith Colin Seymour Carmel Mothersill

Serotonin (5-HT) has been implicated as a potential modulator of the bystander effect in cell cultures. To assess the relevance of serotonin in vivo experiments were done with the zebrafish (Danio rerio). This species, when irradiated, transmits bystander signals to non-irradiated fish. The animals were injected with reserpine, an inhibitor of serotonin at a dose of 80mg/kg of body mass. The re...

Journal: :Cancer research 2007
Olga A Sedelnikova Asako Nakamura Olga Kovalchuk Igor Koturbash Stephen A Mitchell Stephen A Marino David J Brenner William M Bonner

The "radiation-induced bystander effect," in which irradiated cells can induce genomic instability in unirradiated neighboring cells, has important implications for cancer radiotherapy and diagnostic radiology as well as for human health in general. Although the mechanisms of this effect remain to be elucidated, we reported previously that DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), directly measured by g...

Journal: :Radiation research 2004
Adayabalam S Balajee Brian Ponnaiya Rajamanickam Baskar Charles R Geard

The bystander effect is a biological phenomenon whereby cells not directly targeted by DNA-damaging agents elicit a response similar to that of targeted cells. Understanding the mechanisms underlying the bystander effect is important not only for radiation risk assessment but also for evaluation of protocols for radiotherapy of tumors. Identification of DNA repair and signal transduction protei...

2017
Findlay Bewicke-Copley Laura Ann Mulcahy Laura Ann Jacobs Priya Samuel Naveed Akbar Ryan Charles Pink David Raul Francisco Carter

Cells naïve to stress can display the effects of stress, such as DNA damage and apoptosis, when they are exposed to signals from stressed cells; this phenomenon is known as the bystander effect. We previously showed that bystander effect induced by ionising radiation are mediated by extracellular vesicles (EVs). Bystander effect can also be induced by other types of stress, including heat shock...

2012
Carmel Mothersill Colin Seymour

The "non-targeted effects" of ionizing radiation including bystander effects and genomic instability are unique in that no classic mutagenic event occurs in the cell showing the effect. In the case of bystander effects, cells which were not in the field affected by the radiation show high levels of mutations, chromosome aberrations, and membrane signaling changes leading to what is termed "hori...

Journal: :Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine 2003
S James Adelstein

TO THE EDITOR: In their Newsline commentary, Drs. Feinendegen and Pollycove call an important issue to the attention of readers of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine (1). In a discussion of the dual action of ionizing radiation, they posit a competition at low doses between the direct induction of radiation damage and the activation of damage control (adaptive response, hormesis), such that below ...

2014
M Najafi R Fardid Gh Hadadi M Fardid

The radiation-induced bystander effect is the phenomenon which non-irradiated cells exhibit effects along with their different levels as a result of signals received from nearby irradiated cells. Responses of non-irradiated cells may include changes in process of translation, gene expression, cell proliferation, apoptosis and cells death. These changes are confirmed by results of some In-Vivo s...

Journal: :Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology 2012
Jaime Gómez-Millán Iana Suly Santos Katz Virgínea de Araujo Farias Jose-Luis Linares-Fernández Jesús López-Peñalver Gustavo Ortiz-Ferrón Carmen Ruiz-Ruiz Francisco Javier Oliver José Mariano Ruiz de Almodóvar

PURPOSE To examine direct and bystander radiation-induced effects in normal umbilical-cord stromal stem cell (HCSSC) lines and in human cancer cells. MATERIALS AND METHODS The UCSSC lines used in this study were obtained in our laboratory. Two cell lines (UCSSC 35 and UCSSC 37) and two human melanoma skin-cancer cells (A375 and G361) were exposed to ionizing radiation to measure acute radiati...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2000
H Zhou G Randers-Pehrson C A Waldren D Vannais E J Hall T K Hei

Ever since the discovery of X-rays was made by Röntgen more than a hundred years ago, it has always been accepted that the deleterious effects of ionizing radiation such as mutation and carcinogenesis are attributable mainly to direct damage to DNA. Although evidence based on microdosimetric estimation in support of a bystander effect appears to be consistent, direct proof of such extranuclear/...

Journal: :Cancer research 2011
Olga A Martin Christophe E Redon Asako J Nakamura Jennifer S Dickey Alexandros G Georgakilas William M Bonner

The importance of bystander effects is becoming more appreciated, as studies show they may affect the course of cancer and other chronic diseases. The term "bystander effects" refers to changes in naïve cells sharing the same milieu with cells that have been damaged. Bystander cells may be in contact with, or distant from, damaged cells. In addition, it has been shown in culture that not only p...

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