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    <pubDate>Tue, 21 May 2013 20:25:06 GMT</pubDate>
    <dc:date>2013-05-21T20:25:06Z</dc:date>
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      <title>Metabolismo telomerico in risposta al danno al DNA indotto da radiazioni ionizzanti di diversa qualità</title>
      <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2307/511</link>
      <description>&lt;Title&gt;Metabolismo telomerico in risposta al danno al DNA indotto da radiazioni ionizzanti di diversa qualità&lt;/Title&gt;
&lt;Authors&gt;Berardinelli, Francesco&lt;/Authors&gt;
&lt;Issue Date&gt;2009-02-16&lt;/Issue Date&gt;
&lt;Abstract&gt;Ionizing radiations are a well known genotoxic agents,  widely studied for the great impact of their&#xD;
applications (i.e.,  radiotherapy and hadrontherapy) and effects (i.e.,  exposure risk for astronauts in&#xD;
space missions). Exposure to ionising radiations (IR) can result in the deposition of energy to DNA&#xD;
molecules,  thus leading to DNA damage. IR-induced DNA damage is localized,  and the level of&#xD;
localization is believed to increase with increasing linear energy transfer (LET) values of the&#xD;
radiation. Because LET is a measure of the energy released to an object along the path of the&#xD;
radiation,  high-LET radiation can deposit more energy than low-LET one. Condensed or&#xD;
concentrated energy deposition results in cluster of ionization events. When the target is the DNA, &#xD;
the site of such lesions is termed "clustered DNA damage" or "locally multiply damaged site", &#xD;
which consists in two or more lesions localized in close proximity on the DNA duplex.&#xD;
In order to study the biological effects of high-LET radiations,  several endpoints have been&#xD;
evaluated both in rodent- and in human-irradiated cells,  including chromosomal aberrations, &#xD;
micronuclei (MN),  chromosomal non-disjunction,  mutations,  DNA fragmentation,  clonogenic&#xD;
survival,  and cell cycle effects. However,  aspects related to telomere length modulation and&#xD;
telomere metabolism have been so far poorly investigated both in primary and in immortalized cells&#xD;
exposed to low- and high-LET radiations.&#xD;
The aim of the first part of the study was to analyze the DNA-damage and the genotoxic effects&#xD;
induced by graded doses (0, 25-2 Gy) of low-energy protons (high-LET radiation),  and X-rays (low-&#xD;
LET radiation) in human primary fibroblasts. DSB induction and repair as mesured by scoring for&#xD;
-H2AX foci indicated that 3MeV protons,  with respect to X-rays,  yielded a lower number of&#xD;
DSBs per Gy,  which showed a slower kinetics of disappearance in the first hours from irradiations.&#xD;
Furthermore,  irrespective of dose delivered,  a higher fraction of unrejoined DSBs persisted in&#xD;
sample harvested 24 hours from exposure to protons. The higher clastogenic effect of protons was&#xD;
in agreement with the extent of micronuclei (MN) induction in binucleated cells up to 1, 5 Gy. Our&#xD;
results support the notion that DNA DNA damage produced by 28.5 keV/µm protons appears less&#xD;
amenable to be repaired and could be transformed in cytogenetic damage in the form of MN in the&#xD;
first cell cycle from irradiation .&#xD;
After confirming the greater biological effectiveness of high-LET radiations compared to low-LET&#xD;
ones,  we focused our attention on studying telomere metabolism within 24 hours from the exposure&#xD;
to both types of radiations. Interestingly,  data obtained showed a different kinetics of telomere&#xD;
length modulation in cells exposed to low- or high-LET radiations. Moreover,  the phenomenon&#xD;
observed appeared to be conserved both in primary and in immortalized cell lines. Interestingly, &#xD;
exposure of human primary fibroblasts to 4Gy high-LET radiation determined a telomere&#xD;
elongation respect to untreated cells,  whereas no telomere length modulation was observed in low-&#xD;
LET treated fibroblasts. In order to investigate the molecular mechanism underlying the observed&#xD;
elongation,  the expression levels of the telomerase (i.e.,  hTERT) and its enzymatic activity were&#xD;
evaluated. Results obtained excluded the involvement of the telomerase in the observed telomere&#xD;
lengthening induced by high-LET radiation,  thus supporting the activation of a telomerase-&#xD;
independent mechanism. Some mammalian cells lacking in any telomerase activity are able to&#xD;
maintain the length of their telomeres for many population doublings (PDs). This indicated the&#xD;
existence of one or more non-telomerase mechanism(s) for telomere maintenance,  further termed&#xD;
Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres (ALT). To date,  clear evidences of the existence of an ALT&#xD;
activity has been demonstrated only in human tumours and immortalized cell lines,  and in&#xD;
telomerase-null mouse cell lines. To analyze whether a recombinational mechanism could be&#xD;
responsible for the high-LET-induced telomere lengthening observed in human primary fibroblasts, &#xD;
two types of experiments were performed. On one side,  the incidence of recombinational events at&#xD;
telomeres (T-SCE) was measured,  and on the other side the colocalization of telomeres and PML&#xD;
bodies (that are considered as an hallmark of cells with activated ALT pathway),  was analyzed.&#xD;
Strikingly,  our results indicated that the DNA damage induced by high-LET radiation is somehow&#xD;
able to induce telomere lengthening through the transient activation of an ALT recombinational&#xD;
pathway.&#xD;
Recent reports demonstrated that NBS1 is essential for the correct functioning of the ALT pathway.&#xD;
NBS1 gene,  mutated in the NBS human chromosome instability disorder,  encodes for the NBS1&#xD;
protein,  a central player in the response to the ionizing radiation-induced DNA damage,  as well as&#xD;
in the homologous recombination repair. In order to confirm the high-LET-induced&#xD;
recombinational ALT pathway,  telomere length was evaluated in Lymphoblastoid Cell Lines&#xD;
(LCLs) heterozygous (NBS1+/-&#xD;
) and homozygous (NBS1-/-&#xD;
) for a mutation of the NBS1 gene,  as&#xD;
well as in normal cells (NBS1+/+&#xD;
) exposed to 4 Gy of carbon ions (39keV/m). Remarkably,  a&#xD;
telomere elongation was observed in NBS1+/+&#xD;
and NBS1+/-&#xD;
cells,  but not in NBS1-/-&#xD;
ones. These data&#xD;
evidenced that the process of telomere lengthening induced by high-LET radiation is NBS1-&#xD;
dependent,  thus supporting the hypothesis that telomere elongation is mediated by recombinational&#xD;
mechanisms.&#xD;
Beside the analysis performed at 24 hours,  telomere length modulation was followed up to 15 days&#xD;
from the irradiation of both human primary fibroblasts and LCLs. Dynamics of telomere lengths&#xD;
modulation appeared to be different after low- and high-LET irradiation. Our data showed that the&#xD;
telomere lengthening observed in high-LET-treated cells seems to be maintained at 3-4 days,  as&#xD;
well as 15 days after exposure. Interestingly,  the time-course of the low-LET radiation-induced&#xD;
telomere length modulation appeared to be more complex than the high-LET one. In fact,  after 3-4&#xD;
days telomere erosion was reported,  whereas after 15 days from the exposure a telomere&#xD;
lengthening was observed in primary as well as in immortalized cell lines.&#xD;
To explain the time course of low-LET-induced telomere length modulation we have hypothesized&#xD;
that a direct correlation between telomere length and radioresistance/radiosensitivity could account&#xD;
for this phenomenon. To test our hypothesis,  we decided to perform experiments in TK6&#xD;
lymphoblast cells,  since they represent a good and widely used radiobiological cellular model. Data&#xD;
obtained brought us to suggest a model: the radioresistance of cells with longer telomeres drives a&#xD;
selection process that led to an increased telomere length in clones survived to low-LET radiation&#xD;
exposure. A direct correlation between telomere length and radisensitivity/radiresistance has&#xD;
already been proposed in some published reports and imply that telomeres length measurement&#xD;
could be potentially used as a tool to predict clinical radiation response in radiotherapy.&lt;/Abstract&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 15 Feb 2009 23:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <dc:date>2009-02-15T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
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