Abstract

Exposure to a small number of high-energy heavy charged particles (HZE ions), as found in the deep space environment, could significantly affect astronaut health following prolonged periods of space travel if these ions induce mutations and related cancers. In this study, we used an in vivo mutagenesis assay to define the mutagenic effects of accelerated 56Fe ions (1 GeV/amu, 151 keV/μm) in the mouse kidney epithelium exposed to doses ranging from 0.25 to 2.0 Gy. These doses represent fluences ranging from 1 to 8 particle traversals per cell nucleus. The Aprt locus, located on chromosome 8, was used to select induced and spontaneous mutants. To fully define the mutagenic effects, we used multiple endpoints including mutant frequencies, mutation spectrum for chromosome 8, translocations involving chromosome 8, and mutations affecting non-selected chromosomes. The results demonstrate mutagenic effects that often affect multiple chromosomes for all Fe ion doses tested. For comparison with the most abundant sparsely ionizing particle found in space, we also examined the mutagenic effects of high-energy protons (1 GeV, 0.24 keV/μm) at 0.5 and 1.0 Gy. Similar doses of protons were not as mutagenic as Fe ions for many assays, though genomic effects were detected in Aprt mutants at these doses. Considered as a whole, the data demonstrate that Fe ions are highly mutagenic at the low doses and fluences of relevance to human spaceflight, and that cells with considerable genomic mutations are readily induced by these exposures and persist in the kidney epithelium. The level of genomic change produced by low fluence exposure to heavy ions is reminiscent of the extensive rearrangements seen in tumor genomes suggesting a potential initiation step in radiation carcinogenesis.

Highlights

  • The risk of cancer from exposure to charged particles that induce mutations is a long-term concern for astronauts on prolonged missions in deep space [1,2,3,4]

  • The effects of Fe ion or proton exposures on Aprt mutant frequency and toxicity in the kidney epithelium were measured at four separate times

  • We measured the effects of 2 Gy Fe ions or 4 Gy protons; for the second run we measured the effects of a dose of 0.5 Gy Fe ions; for the third run we measured the effects of 1.0 or 0.25 Gy Fe ions, or of 1.0 Gy protons; and for the fourth run we measured the effects of 0.5 Gy protons

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Summary

Introduction

The risk of cancer from exposure to charged particles that induce mutations is a long-term concern for astronauts on prolonged missions in deep space [1,2,3,4]. Most mutagenesis studies with charged particles use cell culture systems [5,6,7,8,9,10,11] and/or mouse models [12,13,14,15,16,17,18] to identify mutagenic effects. In vivo models are useful surrogates for the mutagenic effects of charged particles that will occur in the tissues of astronauts on space missions

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