Abstract
Exposure of bone marrow cells to alpha-particle radiation causes various types of chromosome abnormalities and hematological malignancies. We performed chromosome analysis of hematopoietic stem cells from the bone marrow of 52 Japanese patients with thorotrastosis and 21 age-matched controls. The frequency of cells with stable chromosome abnormalities was significantly higher in the patients with thorotrastosis. Further studies found 14 clonal chromosome aberrations in cells from 11 patients (21.2%); clones observed in the cells from 2 of these patients had high frequencies of chromosome abnormalities. In one case, 68 to 100% of the cells analyzed had a large partial loss in the short arm of chromosome 1 and a translocation between the short arms of chromosomes 2 and 3 [46,XY,1p-,t(2p+;3p-)]. The cells from the other patient contained a clone with partial loss of both the short and long arms of chromosome 5 (46,XX,5p-,5q-). The frequency of this clone has been constant for the last 15 years (6-24%). We also analyzed bone marrow mononuclear cells from 17 of the patients for mutations of the TP53 tumor suppressor gene (formerly known as p53). However, no mutation was found in any of the cells, including those from the 2 patients with abnormal clones. Moreover, repeated medical examinations showed no evidence of leukemia or myelodysplasia in these patients. Our study suggests that exposure of bone marrow cells to alpha-particle radiation may induce clonal chromosomal aberrations at a high frequency.
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