4.4 Article

Mechanism of radiosensitization by hyperthermia (≥43°C) as derived from studies with DNA repair defective mutant cell lines

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYPERTHERMIA
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 131-139

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02656730310001627713

Keywords

hyperthermia; radiation; DNA repair; DNA repair mutant; NHEJ; HR; BER

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All biochemical and cytogenetic data on radiosensitization by heat treatment at and above 43degreesC indicate that inhibition of DNA repair plays a central role. There are several DNA repair pathways involved in restoration of damage after ionising irradiation and the kinetics of all of them are affected by heat shock. This, however, does not imply that the inhibition of each of these pathways is relevant to the effect of heat on cellular radiosensitivity. The current review evaluates the available data on heat radiosensitization in mutant or knockout cell lines defective in various DNA repair proteins and/or pathways. The data show that thermal inhibition of the non-homologous end-joining pathway (NHEJ) plays no role in heat radiosensitization. Furthermore, limited data suggest that the homologous recombination pathway may also not be a major heat target. By deduction, it is suggested that inhibition of base damage repair (BER) could be the crucial step in radiosensitization by heat. While a lack of mutant cell lines and redundancy of the BER pathway have hampered efforts toward a conclusive study, biochemical and correlative evidence support this hypothesis.

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