Abstract

Space exploration involves many dangers including galactic cosmic radiation (GCR). This class of radiation includes high-energy protons and heavy ionizing ions. NASA has defined GCR as a carcinogenic risk for long-duration space missions. To date, no clear strategy has been developed to counter chronic GCR exposure. We hypothesize that preconditioning cells with low levels of radiation will be protective from subsequent higher radiation exposures. H9C2 cells were pretreated with 0.1 to 1.0Gy X-rays. The challenge radiation exposure consisted of either 8Gy X-rays or 75cGy of GCR, using a five-ion GCRsim protocol. A cell doubling time assay was used to determine cell viability. An 8Gy X-ray challenge alone significantly (P<0.05) increased cell doubling time compared to the no-radiation control group. Low-dose radiation pre-treatment ameliorated the 8Gy X-ray-induced increases in cell doubling time. A 75cGy GCR challenge alone significantly increased cell doubling time compared to the no-radiation group. Following the 75cGy challenge, only the 0.5 and 1.0Gy pre-treatment ameliorated the 75cGy-induced increases in cell doubling time. DNA damage or pathological oxidant stress will delay replicative functions and increase cell doubling time. Our results suggested that pretreatment with low-dose X-rays induced an adaptive response which offered a small but significant protection against a following higher radiation challenge. Although perhaps not a practical countermeasure, these findings may serve to offer insight into cell signalling pathways activated in response to low-dose irradiation and targeted for countermeasure development.

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