电离辐射
兴奋
机制(生物学)
DNA损伤
有机体
医学
毒理
癌症研究
生物
计算生物学
细胞生物学
神经科学
化学
辐照
遗传学
物理
氧化应激
DNA
内科学
量子力学
核物理学
作者
Carmel Mothersill,Colin Seymour,Alan Cocchetto,David L. Williams
出处
期刊:Health Physics
[Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer)]
日期:2024-03-25
卷期号:126 (5): 296-308
标识
DOI:10.1097/hp.0000000000001816
摘要
Abstract It is now well accepted that the mechanisms induced by low-dose exposures to ionizing radiation (LDR) are different from those occurring after high-dose exposures. However, the downstream effects of these mechanisms are unclear as are the quantitative relationships between exposure, effect, harm, and risk. In this paper, we will discuss the mechanisms known to be important with an overall emphasis on how so-called “non-targeted effects” (NTE) communicate and coordinate responses to LDR. Targeted deposition of ionizing radiation energy in cells causing DNA damage is still regarded as the dominant trigger leading to all downstream events whether targeted or non-targeted. We regard this as an over-simplification dating back to formal target theory. It ignores that last 100 y of biological research into stress responses and signaling mechanisms in organisms exposed to toxic substances, including ionizing radiation. We will provide evidence for situations where energy deposition in cellular targets alone cannot be plausible as a mechanism for LDR effects. An example is where the energy deposition takes place in an organism not receiving the radiation dose. We will also discuss how effects after LDR depend more on dose rate and radiation quality rather than actual dose, which appears rather irrelevant. Finally, we will use recent evidence from studies of cataract and melanoma induction to suggest that after LDR, post-translational effects, such as protein misfolding or defects in energy metabolism or mitochondrial function, may dominate the etiology and progression of the disease. A focus on such novel pathways may open the way to successful prophylaxis and development of new biomarkers for better risk assessment after low dose exposures.
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