The Bystander Effect: Recent Developments and Implications for Understanding the Dose Response

The bystander effect refers to the biological response of a cell resulting from an event in an adjacent or nearby cell. Such effects depend on intercellular communication and amplify the consequences of the original event. These responses are of particular interest in the assessment of ionizing radi...

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Main Author: R. E. J. Mitchel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2004-07-01
Series:Dose-Response
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1080/15401420490507512
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spelling doaj-1084c5769f92475fb2371fe8842533392020-11-25T03:36:32ZengSAGE PublishingDose-Response1559-32582004-07-01210.1080/15401420490507512The Bystander Effect: Recent Developments and Implications for Understanding the Dose ResponseR. E. J. MitchelThe bystander effect refers to the biological response of a cell resulting from an event in an adjacent or nearby cell. Such effects depend on intercellular communication and amplify the consequences of the original event. These responses are of particular interest in the assessment of ionizing radiation risk because at public or occupational exposure levels not every cell receives a radiation track. Current radiation protection regulations and practices are based on the assumption of a linear increase in risk with dose, including low doses where not all cells are hit. Mechanisms that amplify biological effects are inconsistent with these assumptions. Evidence suggests that there are two different bystander effects in mammalian cells. In one type, a radiation track in one cell leads to damaging, mutagenic, and sometimes lethal events in adjacent, unhit cells. In the other type, a radiation track in one cell leads to an adaptive response in bystander cells, increasing resistance to spontaneous or radiation-induced events. This paper describes some of the data for radiation-induced bystander effects in vitro and correlates that data with in vitro and in vivo observations of risk at low doses. The data suggest that protective effects, including beneficial bystander effects, outweigh detrimental effects at doses below about 100 mGy, but that the reverse is true above this threshold.https://doi.org/10.1080/15401420490507512
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. E. J. Mitchel
spellingShingle R. E. J. Mitchel
The Bystander Effect: Recent Developments and Implications for Understanding the Dose Response
Dose-Response
author_facet R. E. J. Mitchel
author_sort R. E. J. Mitchel
title The Bystander Effect: Recent Developments and Implications for Understanding the Dose Response
title_short The Bystander Effect: Recent Developments and Implications for Understanding the Dose Response
title_full The Bystander Effect: Recent Developments and Implications for Understanding the Dose Response
title_fullStr The Bystander Effect: Recent Developments and Implications for Understanding the Dose Response
title_full_unstemmed The Bystander Effect: Recent Developments and Implications for Understanding the Dose Response
title_sort bystander effect: recent developments and implications for understanding the dose response
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Dose-Response
issn 1559-3258
publishDate 2004-07-01
description The bystander effect refers to the biological response of a cell resulting from an event in an adjacent or nearby cell. Such effects depend on intercellular communication and amplify the consequences of the original event. These responses are of particular interest in the assessment of ionizing radiation risk because at public or occupational exposure levels not every cell receives a radiation track. Current radiation protection regulations and practices are based on the assumption of a linear increase in risk with dose, including low doses where not all cells are hit. Mechanisms that amplify biological effects are inconsistent with these assumptions. Evidence suggests that there are two different bystander effects in mammalian cells. In one type, a radiation track in one cell leads to damaging, mutagenic, and sometimes lethal events in adjacent, unhit cells. In the other type, a radiation track in one cell leads to an adaptive response in bystander cells, increasing resistance to spontaneous or radiation-induced events. This paper describes some of the data for radiation-induced bystander effects in vitro and correlates that data with in vitro and in vivo observations of risk at low doses. The data suggest that protective effects, including beneficial bystander effects, outweigh detrimental effects at doses below about 100 mGy, but that the reverse is true above this threshold.
url https://doi.org/10.1080/15401420490507512
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