Overexpression of human Ku70/Ku80 in rat cells resulting in reduced DSB repair capacity with appropriate increase in cell radiosensitivity but with no effect on cell recovery Journal Article


Authors: Kasten, U.; Borgmann, K.; Burgmann, P.; Li, G.; Dikomey, E.
Article Title: Overexpression of human Ku70/Ku80 in rat cells resulting in reduced DSB repair capacity with appropriate increase in cell radiosensitivity but with no effect on cell recovery
Abstract: The effect of an overexpression of human Ku70/80 was studied using cells of the rat cell lines Rat-1 and R7080, the latter being transfected with the human cDNAs for Ku70 and Ku80. The overexpression was found to result in a 20% reduction of the DNA-PK activity. The kinetics of DSB repair, which was studied after exposure of the cells to 30 Gy of X rays, was biphasic and had identical half-times for Rat-1 and R7080 cells (t(fast) = 7 min and t(slow) = 135 min). However, there was a significant difference between the cell lines in the fractions of DSBs repaired with slow and fast kinetics. In R7080 cells, about twice as many DSBs were repaired with slow kinetics compared to Rat-1 cells (34% compared to 16%). A similar difference was found in the number of residual DSBs (3.6% compared to 2.0%). R7080 cells also showed a reduced capacity to repair chromosome damage as detected by the PCC technique. Concerning cell killing, R7080 cells were dearly more radiosensitive than Rat-1 cells (D(0.1) = 6.4 compared to 10.5 Gy), and this increase in sensitivity correlated well with the increase in residual DSBs. The two cell lines, however, did not vary in cell recovery. For sublethal as well as potentially lethal damage, Rat-1 and R7080 cells showed identical recovery ratios. These data demonstrate that the overexpression of human Ku70/Ku80 led to a reduced capacity for DSB repair with an associated increase in cell sensitivity but with no effect on cell recovery.
Keywords: controlled study; protein expression; dna binding protein; dna-binding proteins; nonhuman; animal cell; animals; dna damage; cell survival; cells, cultured; dna repair; cell line; enzyme activity; animalia; dna strand breakage; nuclear proteins; double stranded dna; kinetics; protein-serine-threonine kinases; rat; fibroblast; radiosensitivity; rats; dna helicases; x irradiation; cell killing; complementary dna; radiation tolerance; dna dependent protein kinase; dna-activated protein kinase; chromosome damage; antigens, nuclear; humans; human; priority journal; article
Journal Title: Radiation Research
Volume: 151
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0033-7587
Publisher: Radiation Research Society  
Date Published: 1999-05-01
Start Page: 532
End Page: 539
Language: English
DOI: 10.2307/3580029
PUBMED: 10319726
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 16 August 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Gloria C Li
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