Abstract
Purpose: Telomerase activation in response to irradiation might enhance the radioresistance of cells. Thus, we have investigated radiation-induced effects on telomerase in six gynecological cancer cell lines, with different intrinsic radiosensitivity and capacity for sublethal damage repair (SLDR).
Materials and methods: Three endometrial adenocarcinoma (UM-EC-1, UT-EC-2B and UT-EC-3) and three vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (A431, UM-SCV-2 and UM-SCV-7) cell lines were irradiated with doses of 5, 10 and 25 Gy and the effects on telomerase were evaluated at 0.5, 6, 24 and 48 h post-irradiation. Telomerase activity was quantitatively measured by SYBR Green real-time telomeric repeat amplification protocol.
Results: The most radioresistant cell line A431 had the strongest stimulatory effects (∼2.0 – 2.5-fold) on telomerase activity 24 and 48 h post-irradiation with the highest radiation doses. In contrast to that, telomerase activities in the highly radiosensitive cell line UT-EC-2B remained below the basal level throughout the 48-h period of post-irradiation with the highest doses, and even a decline to ∼50% of the basal level was found 24 h after exposure. In other cell lines being either moderately or highly radiation resistant, telomerase activity levels in response to irradiation remained mainly at the basal level or gradually increased.
Conclusions: The present findings indicate that there might be a connection between the radiation-induced telomerase response and radiosensitivity. However, no correlation was found between the radiation-induced effects on telomerase and the sublethal damage repair capacity of the cells.