Abstract

Human lymphocytes in the quiescent stage were UVC-irradiated and then incubated for 90 min in the presence of the DNA-repair inhibitor ara-C. The cells were then cultured and analyzed for chromosome aberrations. A single treatment with UVC or ara-C gives rise to a very low yield of dicentrics, whereas the combined treatment can induce a high frequency of these chromosome-type aberrations. The yield in the combined treatment is approximately proportionaal to the square of the UVC fluence in the range 1–3 J/m 2. In addition, the experiments demonstrate that synergistic effects arise when cells are treated with UVC + ara-C and then exposed to X-rays. The results can be explained on the assumption that the UVC + ara-C treatment induces DNA double-strand breaks which, to the first approximation, are randomly distributed over the chromosomes. These breaks are able to interact with each other as well as with X-ray-induced DNA double-strand breaks to form a chromosome-type exchange aberration.

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