Abstract

Recent reports have suggested that elevated chromosomal aberration yields following X-ray irradiation of skin fibroblasts and peripheral lymphocytes in the G 2 phase of the cell cycle are characteristic of affected members of cancer-prone families. These studies propose that the phenomenon is a consequence of impaired caffeine- and arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C)-sensitive DNA repair and might be a useful indicator of genetic susceptibility to cancer. We have tested G 2 chromosomal X-ray sensitivity in peripheral blood lymphocytes from members of kindreds with hereditary cutaneous malignant melanoma (HCMM) combined with the dysplastic nevus syndrome (DNS), disorders in which susceptibility to skin cancer is inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern. In the assay lymphocytes from patients with HCMM/DNS exhibited responses indistinguishable from normal healthy controls. Furthermore, the radiation-induced aberration yields were potentiated to the same strong extent by post-treatments with caffeine, or a combination of ara-C and hydroxyurea, both in lymphocytes from individuals with HCMM/DNS and lymphocytes from healthy controls. Thus, lymphocytes of affected patients with HCMM/DNS do not have an increased sensitivity to X-ray irradiation in the G 2 phase of the cell cycle.

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