Journal article
Radiation-induced bystander effects: What are they, and how relevant are they to human radiation exposures?
BJ Blyth, PJ Sykes
Radiation Research | RADIATION RESEARCH SOC | Published : 2011
DOI: 10.1667/RR2548.1
Abstract
The term radiation-induced bystander effect is used to describe radiation-induced biological changes that manifest in unirradiated cells remaining within an irradiated cell population. Despite their failure to fit into the framework of classical radiobiology, radiation-induced bystander effects have entered the mainstream and have become established in the radiobiology vocabulary as a bona fide radiation response. However, there is still no consensus on a precise definition of radiation-induced bystander effects, which currently encompasses a number of distinct signal-mediated effects. These effects are classified here into three classes: bystander effects, abscopal effects and cohort effect..
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Awarded by United States Department of Energy
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was funded by the Low Dose Radiation Research Program, Biological and Environmental Research, United States Department of Energy, Grant no. DE-FG02-05ER64104.