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CHROMOSOME ABERRATIONS

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From: Biological Dosimetry, pg 18. HUMAN LYMPHOCYTES AS A BIOMARKER ... For biological dosimetry the dicentric historically has been the aberration of choice ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CHROMOSOME ABERRATIONS


1
CHROMOSOME ABERRATIONS
  • AND
  • HUMAN LYMPHOCYTES

2
A LITTLE BACKGROUND
  • Traditionally the study of radiation damage on
    chromosomes was principally conducted on plant
    cells (e.g. Tradescantia paludosa)
  • Study on mammalian cells hampered by large number
    of chromosomes per cell and small size of nucleus
  • Plants contain fewer and generally much larger
    chromosomes
  • Study of chromosome aberrations through the
    effects of ionizing radiation described in terms
    of their appearance at first metaphase after
    exposure to radiation

3
CELL CYCLE
  • From Brum GD, et al (1989). BiologyExploring
    Life pg. 156

4
HOW IT HAPPENS
  • When cells are irradiated, breaks are produced in
    the chromosomes
  • Broken ends appear to be sticky and can rejoin
    with any other sticky end
  • Once breaks are produced, different fragments may
    behave in a variety of ways
  • Breaks may rejoin in their original configuration
  • Breaks may fail to rejoin and give rise to a
    deletion
  • Broken ends may resort and rejoin other broken
    ends and give rise to chromosomes that appear to
    be grossly distorted

5
TYPES OF ABERRATIONS
  • ABERRATIONS SEEN AT METAPHASE ARE OF 2 CLASSES
  • Chromosome Aberrations
  • - result if cell is irradiated early in
    interphase (G1),
  • before chromosome material has been
    duplicated
  • - during DNA synthetic phase that follows,
    this
  • strand of chromatin lays down an identical
    strand
  • next to itself
  • Chromatid Aberration
  • - result if cell is irradiated later in
    interphase after
  • DNA has doubled (G2) and chromosome consist
    of
  • 2 strands of chromatin
  • - break that occurs in a single chromatid
    arm, leaves
  • opposite arm of same chromosome undamaged

6
EXAMPLES OF ABBERATIONS
  • Many types of aberrations and rearrangements are
    possible
  • 3 Types are lethal to the cell
  • Dicentric, Centric Ring (chromosome aberrations)
    and Anaphase Bridge (chromatid aberration)
  • 2 Important Non-Lethal Rearrangements
  • Symmetric translocations and small deletions
    (interstitial and terminal)
  • Associated with several human malignancies via
    activation of oncogenes or loss of suppressor
    genes

7
LETHAL ABERRATIONS
  • All 3 represent gross chromosomal distortions
  • Dicentric (or Tricentric)
  • Involves interchange between 2 separate
  • chromosomes
  • If break occurs in each one early in interphase
    and sticky ends are close together they may join
  • this interchange is replicated during DNA
    synthesis and results in a distorted chromosome
    with 2 (or 3) centromeres and an acentric fragment

8
DICENTRIC CHROMOSOME
  • From Radiobiology for the Radiologist, pg 24

9
  • From Radiobiology for the Radiologist, pg 25

10
  • Centric Ring
  • Break induced by radiation in each arm of a
    single chromatid early in cell cycle
  • The sticky ends may rejoin to form a ring with a
    centromere and an acentric fragment
  • Later during DNA synthetic phase the chromosome
    is replicated

11
CENTRIC RING
  • From Radiobiology for the Radiologist, pg 24

12
  • From Radiobiology for the Radiologist, pg 26

13
  • Anaphase Bridge
  • Results from breaks that occur late in cell cycle
    (G2), after chromosome has replicated
  • Breaks may occur in both chromatids of the same
    chromosome, sticky ends may rejoin incorrectly to
    form a sister union
  • At anaphase, when the 2 sets of chromosomes move
    to opposite poles, the section of chromatin
    between the centromeres is stretched across
    between the poles, hindering separation into new
    daughter cells
  • Difficult to see in human cell cultures since
    bridge is only evident at anaphase

14
ANAPHASE BRIDGE
  • From Radiobiology for the Radiologist, pg 24

15
  • From Radiobiology for the Radiologist, pg 27

16
  • Symmetric Translocation
  • Involves break in 2 pre-replication chromosomes,
    with broken ends being exchanged between the 2
    chromosomes
  • Divided into pericentric (includes centromere)
    and paracentric (confined to 1 chromosome arm)
    inversions
  • Difficult to see in conventional preparation, but
    easy to observe with fluorescent in situ
    hybridization (FISH)
  • A translocation is associated with several human
    malignancies by the activation of an oncogene
    (e.g. Burkitts lymphoma)

17
  • Small Deletion
  • Terminal deletion
  • Loss of genetic material from end of chromatid
  • Not possible to distinguish between non-sister
    union isochromatid and chromosome-type
  • Interstitial deletion
  • Minute very small deletion show as small paired
    dots
  • Acentric ring larger interstitial deletion show
    as acentric rings
  • Deletion may be associated with carcinogenesis if
    loss of material includes a suppressor gene

18
  • From Biological Dosimetry, pg 18

19
HUMAN LYMPHOCYTES AS A BIOMARKER
  • Chromosomal aberrations in peripheral lymphocytes
    currently most fully developed biological
    indicator of exposure to ionizing radiation
  • In vitro and in vivo irradiation of blood
    lymphocytes produces similar yields of chromosome
    damage per rad, so that the observed of
    aberrations in exposed persons can be related to
    the dose by comparison with an in vitro produced
    dose-response curve
  • In circulation they are generally non-dividing
    and accumulate damage typical of that caused by
    irradiation in the G0/G1 cell cycle stage

20
RADIATION EFFECTS ON LYMPHOCYTES
  • Undamaged cells contain 46 chromosomes, each with
    1 centromere
  • Damaged cells may display a number of types of
    aberrations including dicentrics, centric rings,
    acentric fragments and translocations, all of
    which may be related to radiation dose

21
  • From Biological Dosimetry, pg 16

22
DICENTRICS AS A BIOMARKER
  • For biological dosimetry the dicentric
    historically has been the aberration of choice
  • most reliably scored, easily seen in chromosome
    spread
  • low level of occurrence in unirradiated persons
    (about 1/1000 cells)
  • 10x more common than rings and about as common as
    excess fragments
  • Less reliably scored
  • Have a higher occurrence (1/300 cell) in
    unirradiated persons

23
SCORING LYMPHOCYTE ABERRATIONS
  • Lymphocytes may be stimulated to divide in vitro
    by adding phytohemagglutinin (PHA)
  • Stopped at their 1st metaphase by addition of
    Colcemid after about 45 hrs of culture
  • Slides containing metaphase spreads stained with
    Giesma or FISH probes and scored
  • Contamination with 2nd division cells made by
    incorporating bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) into the
    culture
  • In suspected exposure case, typically 500 cells
    are scored

24
DOSE-RESPONSE CURVES
  • Yc?D?D2
  • where Y is yield of dicentrics/cell, D is
    dose(Gy) and c,?,? are fitted constants
  • From Radiobiology for the Radiologist, pg 30

25
  • From The use of Chromosomal Aberrations in Human
    Lymphocytes for Biological Dosimetry, pg S41

26
LIMITATIONS OF SCORING DICENTRICS
  • Major limitation of using dicentrics for
    dosimetry is loss of lymphocytes from the blood
  • Yield of measured dicentrics after an
    irradiation would decrease with time (1/2 life is
    about 3 yrs), although this is uncertain
  • When replaced by stem cell division, new
    lymphocytes will tend not to contain dicentrics
    due to elimination at anaphase
  • unstable aberration since it is lethal to the
    cell

27
FISH AND TRANSLOCATIONS
  • Cells which contain balanced translocations tend
    not to be eliminated at cell division
  • Difficult to see in a conventional preparation,
    but easy to observe with FISH
  • Probes now available for every human chromosome
    that make them fluorescent in bright colours
  • Since this is a stable aberration, the advantage
    of this method is its application to persons
    exposed to radiation at some time in the past
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