Abstract
The combined effects of heavy-ion radiation and hyperthermia on the survival of CHO-SC1 cells and its temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant tsH1 cells were studied using accelerated neon ions followed by mild heating at 41.5 degrees C. The sequence of application of heat and high-LET radiation is significant to cell-killing effects. Heat applied to cells prior to irradiation with neon plateau ions (LET = 32 keV/microns) was less effective than heat applied immediately after irradiation. The ability of cells to synthesize new proteins plays a key role in this sequence-dependent thermal sensitization. When protein synthesis was shut down in tsH1 cells, the thermal enhancement of cell killing by high-LET radiation was the same regardless of the sequence. The thermal enhancement of radiation-induced cell killing was LET-dependent for the SC1 cells, but this was not clearly demonstrated in the tsH1 cells. Furthermore, the RBE of heated SC1 cells varied with LET and reached a maximum of greater than 3 at 80 keV/microns. In the absence of protein synthesis, the maximum RBE value was reduced to 2.6. These results suggest that the accumulation of cellular damage caused by exposure to densely ionizing particles with increasing LETs can be potentiated with active protein synthesis during postirradiation heat treatment.
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