نتایج جستجو برای: radiation induced bystander effect

تعداد نتایج: 2616947  

Journal: :Journal of adolescence 2015
Hana Machackova Lenka Dedkova Katerina Mezulanikova

This study examined the bystander effect in cyberbullying. Using self-reported data from 257 Czech respondents who had witnessed a cyberbullying attack, we tested whether provided help decreased with increased number of other bystanders. We controlled for several individual and contextual factors, including empathy, social self-efficacy, empathic response to victimization, and relationship to t...

2016
Maria Widel

In the past 20 years, the classic paradigm in radiobiology recognizing DNA as the main target for the action of radiation has changed. The new paradigm assumes that both targeted and non-targeted effects of radiation determine the final outcome of irradiation. Radiotherapy is one of the main modality treatments of neoplastic diseases with intent to cure, or sometimes to palliate only, thus radi...

Journal: :Radiation research 2010
Massimo Pinto Edouard I Azzam Roger W Howell

The study of radiation-induced bystander effects in normal human cells maintained in three-dimensional (3D) architecture provides more in vivo-like conditions and is relevant to human risk assessment. Linear energy transfer, dose and dose rate have been considered as critical factors in propagating radiation-induced effects. This investigation uses an in vitro 3D tissue culture model in which n...

Journal: :Radiation research 2011
Sountharia Rajendran Scott H Harrison Robert A Thomas James D Tucker

Cells without intact mitochondrial DNA have been shown to lack the bystander effect, which is an energy-dependent process. We hypothesized that cells harboring mutations in mitochondrial genes responsible for ATP synthesis would show a decreased bystander effect compared to normal cells. Radiation-induced bystander effects were analyzed in two normal and four mitochondrial mutant human lymphobl...

2013
Hideo Tsuji Hiroko Ishii-Ohba Tadahiro Shiomi Naoko Shiomi Takanori Katsube Masahiko Mori Mitsuru Nenoi Mizuki Ohno Daisuke Yoshimura Sugako Oka Yusaku Nakabeppu Kouichi Tatsumi Masahiro Muto Toshihiko Sado

Changes in the thymic microenvironment lead to radiation-induced thymic lymphomagenesis, but the phenomena are not fully understood. Here we show that radiation-induced chromosomal instability and bystander effects occur in thymocytes and are involved in lymphomagenesis in C57BL/6 mice that have been irradiated four times with 1.8-Gy γ-rays. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) were generated in desce...

Journal: :Radiation protection dosimetry 2006
L B Smilenov E J Hall W M Bonner O A Sedelnikova

Radiation-induced bystander effect has been well documented. However, the mechanisms are poorly understood. How we incorporate this effect into the classical models of risk assessment remains an open question. Here, the induction of bystander effect was studied by assessing DNA double-strand break (DSB) formation in situ with the rapid and sensitive gamma-H2AX focus formation assay. Utilising t...

Journal: :Dose-response : a publication of International Hormesis Society 2006
William F Morgan

Radiation induced bystander effects and adaptive responses are two phenomena that modulate cellular responses to low doses of ionizing radiation. Bystander effects generally exaggerate the effects of low doses of radiation by eliciting detrimental effects in nonirradiated cells, thus making the target for radiation effects greater than the volume irradiated. Adaptive responses on the other hand...

2016
Yuexia Xie Shuang Ye Jianghong Zhang Mingyuan He Chen Dong Wenzhi Tu Peifeng Liu Chunlin Shao

Radiation-induced bystander effect (RIBE) has important implications for secondary cancer risk assessment during cancer radiotherapy, but the defense and self-protective mechanisms of bystander normal cells are still largely unclear. The present study found that micronuclei (MN) formation could be induced in the non-irradiated HL-7702 hepatocyte cells after being treated with the conditioned me...

2015
Vasily A. Yakovlev

Cells that are not irradiated but are affected by "stress signal factors" released from irradiated cells are called bystander cells. These cells, as well as directly irradiated ones, express DNA damage-related proteins and display excess DNA damage, chromosome aberrations, mutations, and malignant transformation. This phenomenon has been studied widely in the past 20 years, since its first desc...

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