Title of article :
Circadian rhythms of resistance to UV-C and UV-B radiation in Euglena as related to ‘escape from light’ and ‘resistance to light’
Author/Authors :
Bolige، نويسنده , , Aoen and Kiyota، نويسنده , , Maki and Goto، نويسنده , , Ken، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
12
From page :
43
To page :
54
Abstract :
Radiation-induced stress, either from visible or UV light, is strongest at midday. We found that, in the absence of stress or time cues, Euglena gracilis Z was the most resistant to UV-C and UV-B at subjective midday, whether judged from immediate or reproductive survival. The circadian UV-resistance rhythms were free-running in stationary cultures under 1-h light/1-h dark cycles or continuous darkness, indicating that cell-cycle dependent DNA susceptibility to UV was not involved. We moreover examined what was the primary cause of the circadian UV resistance, estimated as the immediate cell survival. The half-maximal lethal dose (LD50) of UV-C at subjective midday (the most resistant phase) was 156 J/m2, which is ∼3-fold that at subjective midnight. The same was true for UV-B, except the LD50 was ∼13-fold that of UV-C. Temperature during UV irradiation had little effect, indicating that survival was not mediated via enzymatic reactions. Non-enzymatic antioxidants were added 5 min before UV irradiation. Dimethylsulfoxide (a hydroxyl radical scavenger) increased survival after UV-B, but had little effect after UV-C; conversely, sodium ascorbate increased survival after UV-C, but not after UV-B. These findings suggest that circadian rhythms of resistance to UVs involve a common mechanism for maximizing non-enzymatic antioxidative capacity at subjective midday, but the specific antioxidants differ.
Keywords :
Circadian rhythms , Dimethylsulfoxide , Euglena gracilis , Photo-oxidation , antioxidant , l-Ascorbic acid , UV-sensitivity
Journal title :
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B:Biology
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B:Biology
Record number :
1875186
Link To Document :
بازگشت