Abstract

We and others have shown that low-dose X or gamma irradiation of mice leads to an increase in their survival after a subsequent lethal high-dose irradiation. The greatest increase in radioresistance appears at a fixed window of dose and time, e.g. 8 weeks after 5-10 cGy or 2 weeks after 50 cGy preirradiation. We show that low-dose irradiation induces thymocyte apoptosis with a maximal level at 6 h postirradiation that returns to background levels after 24 h. At the same time, we observed no morphological alteration of splenocytes and no early modification of the intensity of T-cell-dependent immune responses as measured by plaque-forming cell (PFC) counts. Nevertheless, we found that PFCs were increased 2 weeks after 50 cGy irradiation, which is the same time at which mice expressed the optimal increase in survival after a second lethal irradiation. We also examined thymocyte apoptosis and spleen PFCs in mice subjected to other stress-inducing pretreatments. Our results emphasize the existence of a lag time between the time of low-dose irradiation in vivo and the appearance of radioresistance. A mechanism that interconnects an environmental stimulus with the response of the animal is proposed based on the evidence presented here and reported in the literature.

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