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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Stress induction in the bacteria Shewanella oneidensis and Deinococcus radiodurans in response to below-background ionizing radiation

, , , , , & show all
Pages 749-756 | Received 11 Aug 2014, Accepted 09 Jun 2015, Published online: 17 Jul 2015
 

Abstract

Purpose: The ‘Linear no-threshold’ (LNT) model predicts that any amount of radiation increases the risk of organisms to accumulate negative effects. Several studies at below background radiation levels (4.5–11.4 nGy h−1) show decreased growth rates and an increased susceptibility to oxidative stress. The purpose of our study is to obtain molecular evidence of a stress response in Shewanella oneidensis and Deinococcus radiodurans grown at a gamma dose rate of 0.16 nGy h−1, about 400 times less than normal background radiation.

Materials and methods: Bacteria cultures were grown at a dose rate of 0.16 or 71.3 nGy h−1 gamma irradiation. Total RNA was extracted from samples at early-exponential and stationary phases for the rt-PCR relative quantification (radiation-deprived treatment/background radiation control) of the stress-related genes katB (catalase), recA (recombinase), oxyR (oxidative stress transcriptional regulator), lexA (SOS regulon transcriptional repressor), dnaK (heat shock protein 70) and SOA0154 (putative heavy metal efflux pump).

Results: Deprivation of normal levels of radiation caused a reduction in growth of both bacterial species, accompanied by the upregulation of katB, recA, SOA0154 genes in S. oneidensis and the upregulation of dnaK in D. radiodurans. When cells were returned to background radiation levels, growth rates recovered and the stress response dissipated.

Conclusions: Our results indicate that below-background levels of radiation inhibited growth and elicited a stress response in two species of bacteria, contrary to the LNT model prediction.

This article is referred to by:
Comment on Castillo et al. (2015)

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

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