Abstract

When an aqueous solution of plasmid DNA at a constant low concentration of 5 micrograms/cm3 was irradiated with 60Co gamma-rays, D37 dose of single-strand breaks was decreased from 18 Gy at a dose-rate of 6.77 Gy/h of acute irradiation to 2.3 Gy at a dose-rate of 0.00212 Gy/h. Or G value was increased from 0.0010 to 0.0081. Similar dose-rate dependency of D37 dose and G value were also found when the plasmid DNA solution was treated with various concentrations of tritiated water at various dose-rates, ranging from 5.13 Gy/h to 0.000118 Gy/h. RBE of tritium beta-rays for single-strand breaks was ranged from 0.3 to 0.5 in a wide range of dose-rates. When the DNA solution was saturated with argon to remove oxygen, the dose-rate dependency of gamma-rays was abolished and that of tritium beta-rays was significantly suppressed. When the DNA solution in air was kept at 4 degrees C for 50 h or 25 days after acute irradiation, the G value of DNA breaks was the same as that kept at -20 degrees C for the same period, but much lower than that of the solution irradiated for the same period at a lower dose-rate to give the same total doses. This shows that the inverse dose-rate effect could not be induced from the different exposure periods but from continuous irradiation of different dose-rates. The inverse dose-rate effect for inactivation of transforming activity of DNA irradiated with tritiated water was also observed in the range from 0.0588 Gy/h to 0.00118 Gy/h.

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