Abstract
The radiation dose-survival of various hematopoietic cell subsets in murine bone marrow (BM) was determined in the cobblestone area forming cell (CAFC) assay under conditions of single-, split-, and multiple-dose irradiation. A greater recovery in cell survival with decreasing dose per fraction, or increasing fraction number, was observed for primitive CAFC day- 28 and day-35 than for CAFC day-6 and day-12 (colony-forming unit (CFU)- granulocyte macrophage and CFU-spleen day-12 equivalents). Linear quadratic (LQ) model analysis of CAFC survival date provided an estimate of the α/β ratio that is an inverse index of the fractionation effect and is known to be lower for late than for acutely responding tissues. This analysis gave decreasing α/β ratios with increasing primitiveness of the CAFC subset. These values were found to be comparatively low (about 4 Gy) for CAFC day-28 and day-35 and are in general agreement with previous studies on long-term repopulation in vivo. In contrast, α/β ratios of CAFC day-6 and day-12 were relatively high (above 6 Gy) and are consistent with values obtained from acute marrow failure. Delayed harvesting of BM after a single dose of 6 Gy showed little evidence of proliferative repopulation over 1 week and hence the differential dose-sparing effect of fractionation among the CAFC subsets appears to be mostly attributable to the influence of sublethal damage repair. These results require a reevaluation of previous notions of marrow stem cell radiosensitivity and repair based on acute marrow lethality (LD(50/30)) or spleen colony (CFU-S) data, especially when applied to fractionated total body irradiation effects on long-term repopulating stem cells in a BM transplant setting.
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CITATION STYLE
Down, J. D., Boudewijn, A., Van Os, R., Thames, H. D., & Ploemacher, R. E. (1995). Variations in radiation sensitivity and repair among different hematopoietic stem cell subsets following fractionated irradiation. Blood, 86(1), 122–127. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v86.1.122.bloodjournal861122
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