Abstract
A semi-log plot of the inhibitory effect of ionizing radiation on the rate of DNA synthesis in normal mammalian cells yields a two-component curve. The steep component, at low doses, has a D0 of about 5 Gy and is the result of blocks to initiation of DNA replicons. The shallow component, at high doses, has a D0 of ⩾⩾ 100 Gy and is the result of blocks to DNA chain elongation. The target size for the inhibition of DNA replicon initiation is about 1000 kb, and the target size for inhibition of DNA chain elongation is about 50 kb. There is evidence that the target for both components is DNA alone. Therefore, the target size for inhibition of DNA chain elongation is consistent with the idea that an effective radiation-induced lesion in front of the DNA growing point somehow blocks its advance. The target size for inhibition of DNA replicon initiation is so large that it must include many replicons, which is consistent with the concept that a single lesion anywhere within a large group (cluster) of replicons is sufficient to block the initiation of replication of all replicons within that cluster. Studies with radiosensitive human cell mutants suggest that there is an intermediary factor whose normal function is necessary for radiation-induced lesions to cause the inhibition of replicon initiation in clusters and to block chain elongation; this factor is not related to poly(ADP-ribose) synthesis. Studies with radiosensitive Chinese hamster cell mutants suggest that double-strand breaks and their repair are important in regulating the duration of radiation-induced inhibition of replicon initiation but have little to do with effects on chain elongation. There is no simple correlation between inhibition of DNA synthesis and cell killing by ionizing radiation.