Abstract

Overnight exposure of Chinese hamster cells (V. 79-753B) in vitro to 1 micrograms/ml dexamethasone increases the radiation resistance of the cells by about 20% both in air and in hypoxia, while having no appreciable effect on the oxygen enhancement ratio (OER). This is accompanied by substantially higher levels of glutathione. When dexamethasone-treated hypoxic cells are irradiated in the presence of nitroxyl biradicals there is no effect on the slope ratio of of the exponential portion of the survival curves. In the case of uncharged biradicals, Ro.03-6061 and RSU-4072. which have been shown to modify the shoulder region of the hypoxic cell survival curve, there is an increase in extrapolation number in dexamethasone-treated cells. When hypoxic cells are exposed to the charged biradical RSU-4073, which does not exhibit shoulder modification, there is no change in extrapolation number. Experiments to examine the effect of concentration of these compounds on radiosensitization show that lower concentrations of both RSU-4072 and RSU-4073 are required to mediate changes in the slope of the hypoxic cell survival curve than to mediate shoulder modification, in the case of RSU-4072. Quantitative ESR data comparing the uptake of RSU-4072 and RSU-4073 with the monoradical TMPN into cells suggest that the cell membrane may act as a barrier to the incorporation of biradicals, and that this is greater for charged than for uncharged compounds. Treatment of cells with dexamethasone does not affect the uptake of the compounds. The data suggest, however, that the cell membrane may be an important site for localization of uncharged biradicals and that this may be important in determining shoulder modification.

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