氡的遗传、细胞遗传学和致癌作用:综述

R.F. Jostes
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引用次数: 66

摘要

在人类和动物研究中,氡暴露与肺癌有关。对吸烟和不吸烟铀矿工人的研究表明,氡本身就是这些矿工所接触水平的肺癌的一个危险因素,尽管可能存在矿山环境中的其他物质影响氡诱发的反应。地雷数据与低暴露家庭环境的相关性经常受到质疑;尽管如此,最近一项对暴露于相对较低氡浓度的矿工的研究表明,肺癌和喉癌死亡率在统计上显著增加。在对大鼠进行的两个主要系列实验中,发现的主要致癌效应是呼吸道肿瘤,并且还注意到反向暴露率效应的证据。虽然在地下矿工的研究中也描述了这种反向剂量率效应,但它可能不适用于家庭环境中的氡。这一观察结果是由于这样一个事实,即在一定的照射量之下,细胞要么只被击中一次,要么根本不被击中,人们不会期望有任何剂量率效应,无论是正常的还是相反的。由于一些染色体畸变作为稳定事件在循环细胞中持续存在,因此正在进行氡的细胞遗传学研究,以帮助完成对导致氡诱导瘤变的事件的理解。已发现氡引起的细胞遗传学损伤(以微核的发生来衡量)是相同剂量的60Co的13倍。各种各样的突变系统已经证明了α粒子突变;最近的研究集中在α诱导诱变的分子基础上。氡以线性和剂量依赖的方式诱导基因突变,并且相对于低let照射具有较高的生物效应。对hprt基因座的研究表明,大约一半的α诱导突变是由基因的完全缺失引起的;其余的突变分为部分缺失、重排和无法通过Southern blot或PCR外显子分析检测到的事件。虽然其他突变系统没有显示出与hprt基因相同的光谱(表明基因环境影响反应),但在氡暴露后,DNA缺失或不同大小的多位点病变似乎占主导地位。随着有关氡在染色体和分子水平上引起的变化的数据的出现,氡致癌的机制正在得到澄清。这些信息应该增加对低暴露水平的风险的理解。
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Genetic, cytogenetic, and carcinogenic effects of radon: A review

Radon exposure has been linked to lung carcinogenesis in both human and animal studies. Studies of smoking and nonsmoking uranium miners indicate that radon alone is a risk factor for lung cancer at the levels encountered by these miners, although the possibility exists that other substances in the mine environment affect the radon-induced response. The relevance of data from mines to the lower-exposure home environment is often questioned; still, a recent study of miners exposed to relatively low radon concentrations demonstrated a statistically significant increase for lung and laryngeal cancer deaths. In two major series of experiments with rats, the primary carcinogenic effect found was respiratory tract tumors, and evidence for an inverse exposure-rate effect was also noted. Although this inverse dose-rate effect also has been described in underground miner studies, it may not similarly apply to radon in the home environment. This observation is due to the fact that, below a certain exposure, cells are hit once or not at all, and one would not expect any dose-rate effect, either normal or inverse. Because some chromosome aberrations persist in cycling cells as stable events, cytogenetic studies with radon are being performed to help complete the understanding of the events leading to radon-induced neoplasia. Radon has been found to induce 13 times as much cytogenetic damage (as measured by the occurrence of micronuclei) than a similar dose of 60Co. A wide variety of mutation systems have demonstrated alpha-particle mutagenesis; recent investigations have focused on the molecular basis of alpha-induced mutagenesis. Gene mutations are induced by radon in a linear and dose-dependent fashion, and with a high biological effect relative to low-LET irradiation. Studies of the hprt locus show that approximately half of the alpha-induced mutations arise by complete deletion of the gene; the remaining mutations are split between partial deletions, rearrangements, and events not detectable by Southern blot or PCR exon analysis. Although other mutation systems do not show the same spectra as observed in the hprt gene (suggesting that the gene environment affects response), DNA deletions or multilocus lesions of various size appear to be predominant after radon exposure. As data emerge regarding radon-induced changes at the chromosomal and molecular level, the mechanisms involved in radon carcinogenesis are being clarified. This information should increase the understanding of risk at the low exposure levels typically found in the home.

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