4.4 Article

Phosphorylation of histone H2AX in radiation-induced micronuclei

Journal

RADIATION RESEARCH
Volume 168, Issue 4, Pages 493-498

Publisher

RADIATION RESEARCH SOC
DOI: 10.1667/RR0788.1

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Funding

  1. Intramural NIH HHS Funding Source: Medline

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DNA double-strand breaks are thought to precede the formation of most radiation-induced micronuclei. Phosphorylation of the histone H2AX is an early indicator of DNA doublestrand breaks. Here we studied the phosphorylation status of the histone H2AX in micronuclei after exposure of cultured cells to ionizing radiation or treatment with colchicine. In human astrocytoma SF268 cells, after exposure to gamma radiation, the proportion of gamma-H2AX-positive to gamma-H2AX-negative micronuclei increases. The majority of the gamma-H2AX-positive mlcronuclei are centromere-negative. The number of gamma-H2AXpositive micronuclei continues to increase even 24 h postirradiation when most gamma-H2AX foci in the main nucleus have disappeared. In contrast, in normal human fibroblasts (BJ), the proportion of gamma-H2AX-positive to gamma-H2AX-negative micronuclei remains constant, and the majority of the centromere-negative cells are gamma-H2AX-negative. Treatment of both cell lines with colchicine results in mostly centromere-positive gamma-H2AX-negative micronuclei. Immunostaining revealed colocalization of MDC1 and ATM with gamma-H2AX foci in both main nuclei and micronuclei; however, other repair proteins, such as Rad50, 53BP1 and Rad17, that co-localized with gamma-H2AX foci in the main nuclei were not found in the micronuclei. Combination of the micronucleus assay with gamma-H2AX immunostaining provides new insights into the mechanisms of the formation and fate of micronuclei. (C) 2007 by Radiation Research Society.

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