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Effect of laser therapy on DNA damage

✍ Scribed by Adenilson S. Fonseca; Thiago O. Moreira; Deise L. Paixão; Fernanda M. Farias; Oscar R. Guimarães; Severo de Paoli; Mauro Geller; Flavia de Paoli


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
141 KB
Volume
42
Category
Article
ISSN
0196-8092

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background and Objective

Whereas the biostimulative effect on tissues using low intensity laser therapy for treating many diseases has been described, the photobiological basis and adverse effects are not well understood. The aim of this study, using experimental models, is to observe the combined effect of physical damage (laser) and a chemical agent (hydrogen peroxide) on Escherichia coli cultures and bacterial plasmids.

Materials and Methods

Survival of E. coli AB1157 (wild type) and BW9091 (xth^−^) cultures were used as an experimental model to assess the effect of agents on DNA, also agarose gel electrophoretic profile of bacterial plasmids for studying single and double strand breaks in DNA exposed to laser irradiation and in DNA pre‐exposed to laser and subsequently incubated with hydrogen peroxide.

Results

Data indicate low intensity laser: (i) did not alter the survival of E. coli cultures, (ii) pre‐exposure had a protective effect against lethal action of hydrogen peroxide on E. coli cultures, and (iii) did not alter the electrophoretic profile and action of hydrogen peroxide on plasmids. This suggests that low intensity therapeutic red laser doses at different emission modes induces sub‐lethal effects on E. coli wild type and exonuclease III mutant cultures inducing protective mechanisms against lethal action of hydrogen peroxide. Laser action on bacterial plasmids is related to lesions other than single or double DNA strands breaks.

Conclusions

This study shows a protective effect or DNA repair mechanism induction by pre‐exposure to low intensity red laser on the lethal action of oxidant agents and, therefore, laser therapy protocol should consider fluencies, wavelength and tissue conditions before beginning treatment. Lasers Surg. Med. 42:481–488, 2010. © 2010 Wiley–Liss, Inc.


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