V79 Chinese hamster cells have been exposed to X-rays or fast neutrons or to the two radiations given sequentially. Cells exposed to a priming dose of X-rays and then exposed immediately to a series of neutron doses regard the X-ray dose as equivalent to a neutron dose giving the same surviving fraction (iso-effective). If the cells are exposed to a neutron dose followed by X-rays the resulting survival is higher than would be obtained if the primary dose had been an iso-effective X-ray dose. However, it is lower than would be expected if the two radiations acted independently. The results imply that there is interaction between the damage caused by X-rays and fast neutrons. If the two radiations are given 3 hours apart they act independently.
Unfed plateau-phase cells have been irradiated with either single doses or up to ten fractions of X-rays 6 hours apart. The single-dose survival curve had an extrapolation number of 11-4, and the oxygen-enhancement ratio (o.e.r.) was 3-1. Cells were exposed to multiple fractions of 200 rad or 150 rad in air and 600 rad or 450 rad in hypoxia. The resulting survival curves did not fit a multi-target, single-hit model of cell survival, being much steeper than that would predict. The curves were exponential up to five fractions of X-rays, but tended to bend downwards with increasing number of fractions. Cells that had survived five fractions of 200 rad (or 600 rad in hypoxia) 6 hours apart, were less able to absorb damage as sub-lethal than those which had not previously been exposed to radiation. The ratio of the initial slopes of the fractionated survival curves for irradiation in air and hypoxia was 2-1, implying that the o.e.r. "on the shoulder" may be less than that in the exponential region of survival.
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