Home

 

Indice/Contents Nº 12

RESPONSE OF HUMAN LYMPHOCYTES TO LOW GAMMA RAY DOSES.

BIBLIOGRAPHY.

1.- Iwama GK, Thomas PT, Forsyth RB and Vijayan MM. Heat shock protein expression in fish. Rev. Fish Biol. Fish., 8, (1998): 35-56.

2.- Parsell DA and Lindquist S. The function of heat shock proteins in stress tolerance: Degradation and reactivation of damage proteins. Anal. Rev. Gen. , 27, (1993): 437-496.

3.- Lin H, Li H, Blank M, Head M and Goodman R. Magnetic field activation of protein-DNA binding, J. Cell. Biochem., 70, (1998): 279-303.

4.- Goodman R and Blank M. Magnetic field stress induce expression of hsp 70, Cell Stress Chap., 3, (1998): 79-88.

5.- Szumiel I. Monitoring and signaling of radiation-induced damage in Mammlian cells. Rad. Res., 150, (1998): S92-S101.

6.- Wolff S. The adaptative response in radiobiology. Evolving insights and implications. Environ. Health Perspect., 106, (1998): 277-283.

7.- Feder ME and Hoffman GE. Heat shock proteins, molecular chaperones and the stress response: Evolutionary and ecological physiology. Anal. Rev. Phys., 61, (1999): 243-282.

8.- Morimoto RI. Regulation of the heat shock transcriptional response: cross talk between a family of heat shock factors, molecular chaperones, and negative regulators, Genes & Dev., 12, (1998): 3788-3796.

9.- Turman MA, Kahn DA, Rosenfeld SL, Apple CA and Bates CM. Characterization of human proximal tubular cells after hypoxic preconditioninng: Constitutive and hypoxia-induced expression of heat shock proteins Hsp70 (A, B and C), Hsc70, and Hsp90, Biochem. Mol. Med., 60, (1997): 49-58.

10.- Lindquist S. Regulation of protein synthesis during heat shock. Nature, 294, (1981): 311-314.

11.- Favatier F, Jacquier-Sarlin MR, Swierczewski E and Polla BS. Polymorphism in the regulatory sequence of the human hsp70-1 gene does not affect heat shock factor binding or heat shock protein synthesis. CMLS, Cell. Mol. Life Sci., 56, (1999): 701-708.

12.- Sierra-Rivera E, Voorhees G J and Freeman ML Gamma irradiation increases hsp-70 in Chinese Hamster ovary cells. Rad. Res. 135, (1993): 40-45.

13.- Amundson SA, Do KT and Fornace AJ. Induction of strees genes by low doses of gamma rays. Rad. Res., 152, (1999): 225-231.

14.- Doltchinkova V, Stoilova S and Baldjiiska M. Effects of gamma-irradiation of the electrokinetic properties of purple membranes. Radiat. Environ. Biophys., 37, (1998): 41-45.

15.- Benderitter M, Vincent-Genod L, Berroud S, Muller S, Donner M, Voisin P. Radio-induced structural membrane modifications: a potential bioindicador of ionizing exposure ?., Intl. J. Radiat. Biol., 75, (1999): 1043-1054.

16.- Boyum A. Separation of leukocytes from blood and bone marrow. Scand. J. Clin. Lab. Invest., 21, (1968): 77-79

17.- Bradford MM. A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Anal. Biochem., 72, (1976): 248-254.

18.- Laemmli EK. Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4. Nature, 227, (1970): 680-685.

19.- Towbin HT, Staehelin T and Gordon J. Electrophoretic transfer of proteins from polyacrylamide gels to nitrocellulose sheets: Procedure and some aplications. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.USA., 76, (1979): 4350-4354.

20.- Cotto JJ, Fox SG and Morimoto RI. HSF1 granules: a novel stress-induced nuclear compartment of human cells. J. Cell Sci., 110, (1997): 2925-2934.

21.- Freeman ML, Borrelli MJ, Meredith MJ and Lepock JR. On the path to the heat shock response: Desestabilization and formation of partially folded protein intermediates, a consequence of protein thiol modification. Free Rad. Biol. Med., 26, (1999): 737-745.

22.- Karlin S and Brocchieri L. Heat shock protein 70 family: Multiple sequence comparisons, function, and evolution. J. Mol. Evol., 47, (1998): 565-577.

23.- de Pomerai D. Heat-shock proteins as biomarkers of pollution. Hum. Exp. Tox., 15, (1996): 279-285.

24.- Downs CA, Heckathorn SA, Bryan JK and Coleman JS. The metionine-rich low-molecular-weight chloroplast heat-shock protein: Evolutionary conservation and accumulation in relation to thermotolerance. Am. J. Bot., 85, (1998): 175-183.

25.- Feder ME and Krebs RA. Natural and genetic engineering of the Heat-shock protein Hsp 70 in Drosophila melanogater: Consequences for thermotolerance. Am. Zool., 38, (1998): 503-517.

26.- Lund AA, Blum PH, Bhattramakki D, and Elthon TE. Heat-stress response of Maize mitochondria. Plant Physiol., 116, (1998): 1097-1110.

27.- Schirmer EC, Queitsch C, Kowal AS, Parsell DA and Lindquist S. The ATPase activity of Hsp104, effects of environmental conditions and mutations. J. Biol. Chem., 273, (1998): 15546-15552.

28.- Park SH, Lee Y, Jeong K, Yoo SY, Cho CK and Lee YS. Different induction of adaptive response to ionizing radiation in normal an neoplastic cells. Cell Biol. Tox., 15, (1999): 111-119.

 

Resumen/Abstract | Introduction | Materials and Methods | Results | Discussion | Bibliography | Complete Version | Home Article