6533b874fe1ef96bd12d6245

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Transcriptional Upregulation of DNA Damage Response Genes in Bank Voles (Myodes glareolus) Inhabiting the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone

Tapio MappesAnders Pape MøllerJenni KesäniemiEugene TukalenkoTimothy A. MousseauAnton LavrinienkoPhillip C. WattsToni JernforsGennadi Milinevsky

subject

0301 basic medicinevauriotDNA damagetuhotZoologyMyodes glareolusDNA repairBiologydnamedicine.disease_causeChernobyl03 medical and health sciencesDownregulation and upregulationkorjausmedicineMre11oxidative stressExclusion zoneGeneoksidatiivinen stressichernobyllcsh:Environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental Sciencelcsh:GE1-350ionising radiationionisoiva säteilyDNAbiology.organism_classificationBank volebody regions030104 developmental biologyAtmta1181DNA damageionizing radiationOxidative stress

description

Exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) from radionuclides released into the environment can damage DNA. An expected response to exposure to environmental radionuclides, therefore, is initiation of DNA damage response (DDR) pathways. Increased DNA damage is a characteristic of many organisms exposed to radionuclides but expression of DDR genes of wildlife inhabiting an area contaminated by radionuclides is poorly understood. We quantified expression of five central DDR genes Atm, Mre11, p53, Brca1, and p21 in the livers of the bank vole Myodes glareolus that inhabited areas within the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone (CEZ) that differed in levels of ambient radioactivity, and also from control areas outside the CEZ (i.e., sites with no detectable environmental radionuclides) in Ukraine. Expression of these DDR genes did not significantly differ between male and female bank voles, nor among sites within the CEZ. We found a near two-fold upregulation in the DDR initiators Mre11 and Atm in animals collected from the CEZ compared with samples from control sites. As Atm is an important regulator of oxidative stress, our data suggest that antioxidant activity may be a key component of the defense against exposure to environmental radioactivity. peerReviewed

10.3389/fenvs.2017.00095http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2017.00095/full