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电离辐射与遗传风险。十、人类辐射诱发遗传损伤的潜在“疾病表型”:来自人类分子生物学和辐射遗传学的观点

Ionizing radiation and genetic risks. X. The potential "disease phenotypes" of radiation-induced genetic damage in humans: perspectives from human molecular biology and radiation genetics.

作者信息

Sankaranarayanan K

机构信息

MGC, Department of Radiation Genetics and Chemical Mutagenesis, Leiden University Medical Centre, Sylvius Laboratories, Wassenaarseweg 72, 2333 AL, Leiden, Netherlands.

出版信息

Mutat Res. 1999 Aug 11;429(1):45-83. doi: 10.1016/s0027-5107(99)00100-1.

Abstract

Estimates of genetic risks of radiation exposure of humans are traditionally expressed as expected increases in the frequencies of genetic diseases (single-gene, chromosomal and multifactorial) over and above those of naturally-occurring ones in the population. An important assumption in expressing risks in this manner is that gonadal radiation exposures can cause an increase in the frequency of mutations and that this would result in an increase in the frequency of genetic diseases under study. However, despite compelling evidence for radiation-induced mutations in experimental systems, no increases in the frequencies of genetic diseases of concern or other adverse effects (i.e., those which are not formally classified as genetic diseases), have been found in human studies involving parents who have sustained radiation exposures. The known differences between spontaneous mutations that underlie naturally-occurring single-gene diseases and radiation-induced mutations studied in experimental systems now permit us to address and resolve these issues to some extent. The fact that spontaneous mutations (among which are point mutations and DNA deletions generally restricted to the gene) originate through a number of different mechanisms and that the latter are intimately related to the DNA organization of the genes, are now well-documented. Further, spontaneous mutations include those that cause diseases through loss of function as well as gain of function of genes. In contrast, most radiation-induced mutations studied in experimental systems (although identified through the phenotypes of the marker genes) are predominantly multigene deletions which cause loss of function; the recoverability of an induced deletion in a livebirth seems dependent on whether the gene and the genomic region in which it is located can tolerate heterozygosity for the deletion and yet be compatible with viability. In retrospect, the successful mutation test systems (such as the mouse specific locus test) used in radiation studies have involved genes which are non-essential for survival and are also located in genomic regions, likewise non-essential for survival. In contrast, most of the human genes at which induced mutations have been looked for, do not seem to have these attributes. The inference therefore is that the failure to find induced germline mutations in humans is not due to the resistance of human genes to induced mutations but due to the structural and functional constraints associated with their recoverability in livebirths. Since the risk of inducible genetic diseases in humans is estimated using rates of "recovered" mutations in mice, there is a need to introduce appropriate correction factors to bridge the gap between these rates and the rates at which mutations causing diseases are potentially recoverable in humans. Since the whole genome is the "target" for radiation-induced genetic damage, the failure to find increases in the frequencies of specific single-gene diseases of societal concern does not imply that there are no genetic risks of radiation exposures: the problem lies in delineating the phenotypes of recoverable genetic damage that are recognizable in livebirths. Data from studies of naturally-occurring microdeletion syndromes in humans and those from mouse radiation studies are instructive in this regard. They (i) support the view that growth retardation, mental retardation and multisystem developmental abnormalities are likely to be among the quantitatively more important adverse effects of radiation-induced genetic damage than mutations in a few selected genes and (ii) underscore the need to expand the focus in risk estimation from known genetic diseases (as has been the case thus far) to include these induced adverse developmental effects although most of these are not formally classified as "genetic diseases". (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

摘要

传统上,对人类辐射暴露遗传风险的估计是指遗传疾病(单基因、染色体和多因素疾病)的发生频率相对于人群中自然发生的频率的预期增加。以这种方式表示风险的一个重要假设是,性腺辐射暴露会导致突变频率增加,进而导致所研究的遗传疾病频率上升。然而,尽管在实验系统中有令人信服的证据表明辐射可诱发突变,但在涉及遭受辐射暴露的父母的人类研究中,并未发现所关注的遗传疾病频率或其他不良影响(即那些未被正式归类为遗传疾病的影响)有所增加。自然发生的单基因疾病所基于的自发突变与实验系统中研究的辐射诱发突变之间已知的差异,现在使我们能够在一定程度上解决和化解这些问题。自发突变(其中包括点突变和通常局限于基因的DNA缺失)通过多种不同机制产生,且后者与基因的DNA组织密切相关,这一点现已得到充分证明。此外,自发突变包括那些通过基因功能丧失以及功能获得而导致疾病的突变。相比之下,实验系统中研究的大多数辐射诱发突变(尽管是通过标记基因的表型鉴定的)主要是导致功能丧失的多基因缺失;活产中诱导缺失的可恢复性似乎取决于该基因及其所在的基因组区域是否能够耐受该缺失的杂合性,同时又与生存能力兼容。回顾过去,辐射研究中使用的成功的突变测试系统(如小鼠特定位点测试)所涉及的基因对于生存并非必需,并且也位于对生存同样非必需的基因组区域。相比之下,大多数寻找诱导突变的人类基因似乎并不具备这些特性。因此可以推断,在人类中未能发现诱导的种系突变并非由于人类基因对诱导突变具有抗性,而是由于与它们在活产中的可恢复性相关的结构和功能限制。由于人类中可诱导遗传疾病的风险是使用小鼠中“恢复”突变的速率来估计的,因此需要引入适当的校正因子来弥合这些速率与人类中可能导致疾病的突变的可恢复速率之间的差距。由于整个基因组是辐射诱发遗传损伤的“靶点”,未能发现社会关注的特定单基因疾病频率增加并不意味着不存在辐射暴露的遗传风险:问题在于确定在活产中可识别的可恢复遗传损伤的表型。人类自然发生的微缺失综合征研究数据和小鼠辐射研究数据在这方面具有指导意义。它们(i)支持这样一种观点,即生长发育迟缓、智力发育迟缓以及多系统发育异常可能是辐射诱发遗传损伤比少数选定基因中的突变在数量上更重要的不良影响之一,并且(ii)强调有必要将风险估计的重点从已知的遗传疾病(如迄今为止的情况)扩大到包括这些诱导的不良发育影响,尽管其中大多数未被正式归类为“遗传疾病”。(摘要截断)

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