Английская Википедия:Bystander effect (radiobiology)

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Шаблон:Distinguish The radiation-induced bystander effect (bystander effect) is the phenomenon in which unirradiated cells exhibit irradiated effects as a result of signals received from nearby irradiated cells. In November 1992, Hatsumi Nagasawa and John B. Little first reported this radiobiological phenomenon.[1]

Effect

There is evidence that targeted cytoplasmic irradiation results in mutation in the nucleus of the hit cells.[2][3] Cells that are not directly hit by an alpha particle, but are in the vicinity of one that is hit, also contribute to the genotoxic response of the cell population.[4][5] Similarly, when cells are irradiated, and the medium is transferred to unirradiated cells, these unirradiated cells show bystander responses when assayed for clonogenic survival and oncogenic transformation.[6][7] This is also attributed to the bystander effect.

Demonstration

The demonstration of a bystander effect in 3D human tissues[8] and, more recently, in whole organisms[9] have clear implication of the potential relevance of the non-targeted response to human health.

Consequences

This effect may also contribute to the final biological consequences of exposure to low doses of radiation.[10][11] However, there is currently insufficient evidence to suggest that the bystander effect promotes carcinogenesis in humans at low doses.[12]

Notes

Note that the bystander effect is not the same as the abscopal effect. The abscopal effect is a phenomenon where the response to radiation is seen in an organ/site distant to the irradiated organ/area, that is, the responding cells are not juxtaposed with the irradiated cells. T-cells and dendritic cells have been implicated to be part of the mechanism.[13]

In suicide gene therapy, the "bystander effect" is the ability of the transfected cells to transfer death signals to neighboring tumor cells.[14]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Radiation oncology