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Original Articles

Quantitative relationships between acentric fragments and micronuclei: new models and implications for curve fitting

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Pages 197-205 | Received 23 Jan 2019, Accepted 03 Oct 2019, Published online: 30 Oct 2019
 

Abstract

Purpose: To examine the phenomena governing the quantitative relationships between acentric fragments and micronuclei and understand which formulas are useful for curve-fitting of experimental data of micronuclei.

Materials and methods: A stochastic model, including the phenomena of inclusion, coalescence and culling out, was developed and applied to experimental data.

Results: Probabilities for inclusion/exclusion of acentric fragments into daughter nuclei and for coalescence of many fragments into a single micronucleus were found to be not cell type-specific. The biological basis for this result is explained with the lack of DNA damage checkpoints between metaphase (when acentric fragments are scored) and telophase (when micronuclei are formed). The phenomenon of “culling out” cells with high numbers of acentric fragments is also described, along with its proposed biological mechanism.

Conclusions: Apart from complex formulas that describe these phenomena, we discuss which simple formulas can best approximate them and when is the case to use them for curve fitting of micronuclei data.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Ion Udroiu

Ion Udroiu is a Postdoctoral fellow at “Roma Tre” University, Rome, Italy. His main interests are genotoxicity, radiobiology and evolution.

Antonella Sgura

Antonella Sgura is Professor of Genetics at “Roma Tre” University, Rome, Italy. Her main interest is telomere maintenance mechanisms and chromosome instability.

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