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Antioxidants Reduce Consequences of Radiation Exposure.

Authors :
Back, Nathan
Cohen, Irun R.
Lajtha, Abel
Lambris, John D.
Paoletti, Rodolfo
Kang, Kyung A.
Harrison, David K.
Bruley, Duane F.
Okunieff, Paul
Swarts, Steven
Keng, Peter
Sun, Weimin
Wang, Wei
Kim, Jung
Yang, Shanmin
Zhang, Hengshan
Liu, Chaomei
Williams, Jacqueline P.
Huser, Amy K.
Zhang, Lurong
Source :
Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXIX; 2008, p165-178, 14p
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Antioxidants have been studied for their capacity to reduce the cytotoxic effects of radiation in normal tissues for at least 50 years. Early research identified sulfur-containing antioxidants as those with the most beneficial therapeutic ratio, even though these compounds have substantial toxicity when given in-vivo. Other antioxidant molecules (small molecules and enzymatic) have been studied for their capacity to prevent radiation toxicity both with regard to reduction of radiation-related cytotoxicity and for reduction of indirect radiation effects including long-term oxidative damage. Finally, categories of radiation protectors that are not primarily antioxidants, including those that act through acceleration of cell proliferation (e.g. growth factors), prevention of apoptosis, other cellular signaling effects (e.g. cytokine signal modifiers), or augmentation of DNA repair, all have direct or indirect effects on cellular redox state and levels of endogenous antioxidants. In this review we discuss what is known about the radioprotective properties of antioxidants, and what those properties tell us about the DNA and other cellular targets of radiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISBNs :
9780387749105
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXIX
Publication Type :
Book
Accession number :
33755070
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-74911-2_20