Abstract

The extent of cell-cycle delay and the frequency of aberrant metaphases induced by bleomycin (BLM) and X-rays have been compared at doses which produce similar frequencies of chromosome aberrations by the 2 clastogenic agents (BLM, 40 ωg/ml and X-rays, 2 Gy) in muntjac lymphocytes. The frequency of aberrant metaphases was low in BLM-treated cells; however, the number of aberrations per metaphase was higher than in cells exposed to X-rays. Thus in contrast to their uniform sensitivity to X-rays, the lymphocytes showed differential sensitivity to BLM. This might be due to differences among the cells in their uptake of BLM and/or its action on the nuclear membrane-DNA complex. In spite of the total number of chromosome aberrations being similar to that induced by X-rays, BLM did not induce a significant delay in cell-cycle progression as observed in the case of X-rays. A possible explanation could be that the DNA damages being limited to fewer cells than in the case of X-irradiation, the BLM-treated cultures had more normal cells allowing faster progression and/or unlike X-rays BLM may not be causing other cellular damages in addition to DNA breaks.

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