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Role of mitochondrial DNA in cell death induced by 125I decay
L S Yasui,K G Hofer


The role of mitochondrial DNA in radiation-induced cell death was determined by selective [125I]iododeoxyuridine (125IUdR) incorporation into exclusively nuclear sites compared to labelling in both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA of Chinese hamster cells. Such selectivity was achieved by using berenil (25 micrograms/ml for 24 h), a drug which inhibits mitochondrial DNA synthesis without affecting incorporation of 125IUdR into nuclear DNA but does not result in reduced clonogenicity or cell cycle perturbations or alteration in the X-ray response of cells. There was no difference in cell killing between cells with nuclear labelling alone compared with nuclear plus mitochondrial labelling. The absence of decays in mitochondrial DNA does not affect the ability of 125I to induce lethal cell damage. The two treatment groups have superimposable curves with a D0 of 96 decays/cell. These findings indicate that mitochondrial DNA is not the most sensitive target for radiation-induced cell death from 125I decay.

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