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EFFECTS OF DOSE FRACTIONATION ON ULTRAVIOLET SURVIVAL OF ESCHERICHIA COLI
Authors:Walter Harm
Institution:Division of Biology, Southwest Center for Advanced Studies, Dallas, Texas 75230
Abstract:Abstract— Exposure of E. coli B/r and B at low average dose rates of u.v. radiation (2537 Å), produced either by fractionated doses or by continuous irradiation at a very low dose rate (80 ergs/mm2/hr), results in much increased survival compared to single exposure at high dose rate. This increase is attributed to repair taking place during the irradiation period. The effect is small in the repair-deficient strains E. coli B8-1_, and C syn- , and is absent in phage T1 and T4, which cannot undergo repair in the extracellular state. However, the prolonged time available for repair in these experiments accounts for only a very minor part of the increase in survival. The principal factor apparently is that the number of lesions present at any time remains relatively low. Presumably complete repair, not only the excision step, can occur in buffer during the irradiation period. This interpretation is supported by experiments in which cells were exposed to combinations of highly fractionated irradiation and single-dose irradiation. We therefore propose that mutual interference in repair, possibly by overlapping of repair regions in complementary DNA strands, reduces considerably the repair efficiency if many lesions are present. This hypothesis explains the 'shouldered' survival curves of B/r and possibly other E. coli strains as due to decreasing repair efficiency with increasing u.v. dose
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