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Nucleic Acids Research, 2001, Vol. 29, No. 9 1960-1966
© 2001 Oxford University Press

Heat effects on DNA repair after ionising radiation: hyperthermia commonly increases the number of non-repaired double-strand breaks and structural rearrangements

R. A. El-Awady1,3, E. Dikomey2 and J. Dahm-Daphi1,*

1Department of Radiation Therapy and Oncology and 2Institute of Biophysics and Radiobiology, University of Hamburg, Martinistrasse 52, 20246 Hamburg, Germany and 3Department of Tumour Biology, National Cancer Institute, University of Cairo, Cairo, Egypt

After ionising radiation double-strand breaks (dsb) are lethal if not repaired or misrepaired. Cell killing is greatly enhanced by hyperthermia and it is questioned here whether heat not only affects dsb repair capacity but also fidelity in a chromosomal context. dsb repair experiments were designed so as to mainly score non-homologous end joining, while homologous recombination was largely precluded. Human male G0 fibroblasts were either preheated (45°C, 20 min) or not before X-irradiation. dsb induction and repair were measured by conventional gel electrophoresis and an assay combining restriction digestion using a rare cutting enzyme (NotI) and Southern hybridisation, which detects large chromosomal rearrangements (>100 kb). dsb induction rate in an X-chromosomal NotI fragment was 4.8 x 10–3 dsb/Gy/Mb. Similar values were found for the genome overall and also when cells were preheated. After 50 Gy, fibroblasts were competent to largely restore the original restriction fragment size. Five per cent of dsb remained non-rejoined and 14% were misrejoined. Correct restitution of restriction fragments occurred preferably during the first hour but continued at a slow rate for 12–16 h. In addition, dsb appeared to misrejoin throughout the entire repair period. After hyperthermia the fractions of non-rejoined and misrejoined dsb were similarly increased to 13 and 51%, respectively. It is suggested that heat increases the probability of dsb being incorrectly rejoined but it is not likely to interfere with one dsb repair pathway in particular.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +49 40 42803 3930; Fax: +49 40 42803 5694; Email: dahm{at}uke.uni-hamburg.de


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