Abstract

Radiosensitization by various concentrations of O2 has been studied in an Escherichia coli K-12 wild-type strain and some derived glutathione (GSH)-deficient mutants using 60Co gamma-irradiation. The maximum oxygen enhancement ratio (OER) and the K-value, the O2 concentration that produced half the maximum O2 effect, were found to depend on the GSH biosynthetic capacity of the strains. For the GSH+ wild-type strain, AB1157, and the GSH- mutant, 830, which is deficient in glutathione synthetase, the final enzyme in the GSH biosynthetic pathway, the maximum OERs were both about 3.9 and the K-values were 0.53% and 0.24% O2, respectively. On the other hand, the maximum OERs for two GSH- mutants, 7 and 821, both deficient in gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase, the penultimate enzyme in the GSH biosynthetic pathway, were about 2.7 and the K-values were about 0.06% O2 for both. The fast chemical repair of O2-dependent damage in these strains was measured using a fast mixing and irradiation method, the gas explosion technique. The chemical repair rates in the various E. coli strains varied approximately in proportion to the O2 K-values, and both the rates of chemical repair and the K-values correlated approximately with the levels of non-protein sulphydryls in the various strains.

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