Abstract

Dose-response studies of the radiosensitivity of spermatogonial stem cells in various epithelial stages after irradiation with graded doses of fission neutrons of 1 MeV mean energy were carried out in the Cpb-N mouse. These studies on the stem cell population in stages IX-XI yielded simple exponential lines characterized by an average D0 value of 0.76 +/- 0.02 Gy. In the subsequent epithelial stages XII-III, a significantly lower D0 value of 0.55 +/- 0.02 Gy was found. In contrast to the curves obtained for stem cells in stages IX-III, the curves obtained in stages IV-VIII indicated the presence of a mixture of radioresistant and radiosensitive stem cells. In stage VII, almost no radioresistant stem cells appeared to be present and a D0 value for the radiosensitive stem cells of 0.22 +/- 0.01 Gy was derived. Previously, data were obtained on the size of colonies (in number of spermatogonia) derived from surviving stem cells. Combining these data with data from the newly obtained dose-response curves yielded the number of stem cells, per stage and with the specific radiosensitivities, present in the control epithelium. In stages IX-XI, there are approximately 6 stem cells per 1000 Sertoli cells with a radiosensitivity characterized by a D0 of 0.76 Gy, which corresponds to one-third of the As population in these stages. (The As spermatogonia are presumed to be the stem cells of spermatogenesis.) IN stages XII-III, there are approximately 12 stem cells per 1000 Sertoli cells with a radiosensitivity characterized by a D0 of 0.55 Gy, which roughly equals the number of A single spermatogonia in these stages. These calculations could not be made for stages IV-VIII since no simple exponential lines were obtained for these stages. In view of the pattern of the proliferative activity of the spermatogonial stem cells during the epithelial cycle, it appears that the stem cell population is most radiosensitive during the period when the majority of these cells are in G0 phase, most resistant when the cells are stimulated again into proliferation, and of intermediate sensitivity during active proliferation.

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