Abstract

We have investigated the properties of an in vitro cell survival assay that uses as its endpoint the ability to form polyploid cells (polykaryons) in the presence of cytochalasin B (CB). The criterion for survival is that a polykaryon-forming unit (PFU) must reach the arbitrary DNA content of at least 16C. The age-dependence of PFU sensitivity to 137Cs irradiation was determined using V79-379A cells synchronized at mitosis. Cells assayed as PFUs demonstrated much less variation in radiosensitivity with age than did clonogens, but the changes in curve shape were qualitatively similar. In both assays mitotic cells yielded an exponential survival curve while that obtained at 5 h (mid-late S) had a marked quadratic component. Owing to the small overall variation in PFU survival with age, at doses greater than about 25 Gy the surviving fraction at 5 h was lower than in mitosis. In both V79-379A and HeLa S3 cells, PFUs demonstrated a capacity for split-dose recovery and yielded recovery ratios at 2.6 at 50 Gy in V79 and 1.5 at 20 Gy in HeLa. Since these ratios were much lower than in clonogens at the same dose, we suggest that this is consistent with an association that we have previously demonstrated between PFU response and the clonogenic initial slope. In an attempt to clarify the DNA lesions to which PFUs may be sensitive, we determined PFU response following exposure to 254-nm UV irradiation. In contrast with ionizing radiation, PFU response to UV was very similar to that of clonogens. This suggests that following UV exposure the absence of cytokinesis in polykaryons may confer less protection than in the case of ionizing radiation, possibly due to fundamental differences in the spectrum of DNA lesions produced.

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