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Original

Altered growth and radiosensitivity in neural precursor cells subjected to oxidative stress

, , , &
Pages 640-647 | Received 10 Nov 2005, Accepted 12 Jan 2006, Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Purpose: To determine whether changes in oxidative stress could enhance the sensitivity of neural precursor cells to ionizing radiation.

Materials and methods: Two strategies were used whereby oxidative stress was modulated endogenously, through manipulation cell culture density, or exogenously, through direct addition of hydrogen peroxide.

Results: Cells subjected to increased endogenous oxidative stress through low-density growth routinely exhibited an inhibition of growth following irradiation. However, cells subjected to chronic exogenous oxidative treatments showed increased sensitivity to proton and γ-irradiation compared to untreated controls. Reduced survival of irradiated cultures subjected to oxidizing conditions was corroborated using enzymatic viability assays, and was observed over a range of doses (1 – 5 Gy) and post-irradiation re-seeding densities (20 – 200 K/plate).

Conclusions: Collectively our results provide further support for the importance of redox state in the regulation of neural precursor cell function, and suggest that oxidative stress can inhibit the proliferative potential of cells through different mechanisms. This is likely to compromise survival and under conditions where excess exogenous oxidants might predominate, sensitivity to irradiation may be enhanced.

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