Reduced Environmental Dose Rates Are Responsible for the Increased Susceptibility to Radiation-Induced DNA Damage in Larval Neuroblasts of Drosophila Grown inside the LNGS Underground Laboratory

Int J Mol Sci. 2022 May 13;23(10):5472. doi: 10.3390/ijms23105472.

Abstract

A large amount of evidence from radiobiology studies carried out in Deep Underground Laboratories support the view that environmental radiation may trigger biological mechanisms that enable both simple and complex organisms to cope with genotoxic stress. In line with this, here we show that the reduced radiation background of the LNGS underground laboratory renders Drosophila neuroblasts more sensitive to ionizing radiation-induced (but not to spontaneous) DNA breaks compared to fruit flies kept at the external reference laboratory. Interestingly, we demonstrate that the ionizing radiation sensitivity of flies kept at the LNGS underground laboratory is rescued by increasing the underground gamma dose rate to levels comparable to the low-LET reference one. This finding provides the first direct evidence that the modulation of the DNA damage response in a complex multicellular organism is indeed dependent on the environmental dose rate.

Keywords: Drosophila melanogaster; chromosome aberrations; deep underground laboratory; dose rate effect; environmental radiation.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Background Radiation
  • DNA Damage
  • Drosophila*
  • Laboratories*
  • Larva

Grants and funding

This work has been supported by grant number: “Anna Tramontano 2018”; funder: Fondazione Cenci Bolognetti/Istituto Pasteur Italia, Rome, Italy to G.C., Programmes Transversaux de Recherche (PTR), Pasteur Institute (France) to G.C., by the “Operative Collaboration for R&D Activities in the Field of on Radiobiology” (Assegno di ricerca n. 20573/2018 to P.M.) in the framework of the General INFN-ISS Agreement, and by 2020–2022 INFN-CSN5 RENOIR experiment to M.A.T.