Ja. Dolling et al., Role of RAD9-dependent cell-cycle checkpoints in the adaptive response to ionizing radiation in yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, INT J RAD B, 76(9), 2000, pp. 1273-1279
Purpose: To determine whether yeast cells (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) defect
ive in damage-inducible cell-cycle arrest can invoke an adaptive response a
nd become resistant to normally lethal doses of ionizing radiation.
Materials and methods: Wild-type yeast cells, cells defective for DNA-damag
e-responsive G1 and G2 cell-cycle arrest (rad9 Delta), and cells defective
for recombinational repair of DNA damage (rad50, 51, 52) were subjected to
adapting treatments of heat or radiation and subsequently exposed to normal
ly lethal doses of radiation. Survival, as measured by colony-forming abili
ty, was compared with non-adapted, control cells.
Results: Wild-type and rad9 Delta cells became more resistant to potentiall
y lethal doses of radiation after exposure to conditions that are known to
elicit the adaptive response. Further, the relative magnitude of resistance
developed by the normal, wild-type and rad9 Delta yeast cells was similar,
wit a dose modifying factor (at D-1) for radiation-induced radiation resis
tance of 1.3 for both strains. Dose modifying factors (at D-1) for heat-ind
uced radiation resistance were 1.7 and 1.6 for wild-type and rad9 Delta cel
ls, respectively. In contrast, none of the recombinational repair-defective
cells exhibited radiation resistance after an adapting treatment.
Conclusions: The ability of yeast cells to arrest in cell-cycle gap phases
did not appear to contribute significantly to radiation resistance induced
by radiation or heat. Instead, it is suggested that the adaptive response w
as due mainly to the existence and enhancement of cellular recombinational
repair capacity, which was sufficient to repair any DNA damage without the
requirement of a detectable cell-cycle delay.