Grote S J, Joshi G P, Revell S H, Shaw C A
Int J Radiat Biol Relat Stud Phys Chem Med. 1981 Apr;39(4):395-408. doi: 10.1080/09553008114550491.
Our preceding paper (Crote, Joshi, Revell and Shaw 1981) described a method for the direct scrutiny of live cultured mammalian cells with a microscope, and reported that all diploid Syrian hamster cells (BHK 21 C13) of a sample given 1.4 Gy of 220 kV X-rays in Gl reached post-radiation mitosis without discernible abnormality, but then diverged in observed behaviour: descendent cells from some first mitoses continued to proliferate normally while cells from other first mitoses behaved abnormally and produced either slow-growth or stop-growth colonies. This paper completes our study of the same irradiated cell sample, and shows that these post-mitotic differences in clonogenic ability were related to acentric chromosome fragment losses at post-radiation mitosis, which were detected in live daughter-cell pairs as micronuclei. The proportion of live daughter-cell pairs scored as deficient was at least 80 per cent of the proportion of comparable fixed-and-stained mitoses with detected acentric fragments.