Radiation Risk Prediction and Genetics: The Influence of the TP53 Gene

Risk prediction and dose limits for human radiation exposure are based on the assumption that risk is proportional to total dose. However, there is concern about the appropriateness of those limits for people who may be genetically cancer prone. The TP53 gene product functions in regulatory pathways...

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Main Author: R. E. J. Mitchel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2005-10-01
Series:Dose-Response
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2203/dose-response.003.04.007
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spelling doaj-5d1cf3b6a4cd46fb98d4f423c9bf94c72020-11-25T02:34:07ZengSAGE PublishingDose-Response1559-32582005-10-01310.2203/dose-response.003.04.007Radiation Risk Prediction and Genetics: The Influence of the TP53 Gene R. E. J. MitchelRisk prediction and dose limits for human radiation exposure are based on the assumption that risk is proportional to total dose. However, there is concern about the appropriateness of those limits for people who may be genetically cancer prone. The TP53 gene product functions in regulatory pathways for DNA repair, cell cycle checkpoints and apoptosis, processes critical in determining ionizing radiation risk for both carcinogenesis and teratogenesis. Mice that are deficient in TP53 function are cancer prone. This review examines the influence of variations in TP53 gene activity on cancer and teratogenic risk in mice exposed to radiation in vivo , and compares those observations to the assumptions and predictions of radiation risk inherent in the existing system of radiation protection. Current assumptions concerning a linear response with dose, dose additivity, lack of thresholds and dose rate reduction factors all appear incorrect at low doses. TP53 functional variations can further modify radiation risk from either high or low doses, or risk from radiation exposures combined with other stresses, and those modifications can result in both quantitative and qualitative changes in risk.https://doi.org/10.2203/dose-response.003.04.007
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. E. J. Mitchel
spellingShingle R. E. J. Mitchel
Radiation Risk Prediction and Genetics: The Influence of the TP53 Gene
Dose-Response
author_facet R. E. J. Mitchel
author_sort R. E. J. Mitchel
title Radiation Risk Prediction and Genetics: The Influence of the TP53 Gene
title_short Radiation Risk Prediction and Genetics: The Influence of the TP53 Gene
title_full Radiation Risk Prediction and Genetics: The Influence of the TP53 Gene
title_fullStr Radiation Risk Prediction and Genetics: The Influence of the TP53 Gene
title_full_unstemmed Radiation Risk Prediction and Genetics: The Influence of the TP53 Gene
title_sort radiation risk prediction and genetics: the influence of the tp53 gene
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Dose-Response
issn 1559-3258
publishDate 2005-10-01
description Risk prediction and dose limits for human radiation exposure are based on the assumption that risk is proportional to total dose. However, there is concern about the appropriateness of those limits for people who may be genetically cancer prone. The TP53 gene product functions in regulatory pathways for DNA repair, cell cycle checkpoints and apoptosis, processes critical in determining ionizing radiation risk for both carcinogenesis and teratogenesis. Mice that are deficient in TP53 function are cancer prone. This review examines the influence of variations in TP53 gene activity on cancer and teratogenic risk in mice exposed to radiation in vivo , and compares those observations to the assumptions and predictions of radiation risk inherent in the existing system of radiation protection. Current assumptions concerning a linear response with dose, dose additivity, lack of thresholds and dose rate reduction factors all appear incorrect at low doses. TP53 functional variations can further modify radiation risk from either high or low doses, or risk from radiation exposures combined with other stresses, and those modifications can result in both quantitative and qualitative changes in risk.
url https://doi.org/10.2203/dose-response.003.04.007
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