Abstract

Whereas nonsolar ultraviolet C radiation primarily affects nuclei (i.e., where it is absorbed by nucleic acids) of eukaryotic cells, ultraviolet radiation of long (320-380 nm) wavelengths (ultraviolet A) and intermediate (290-320 nm) wavelengths (ultraviolet B) primarily affects lipid membranes. We have previously demonstrated that ultraviolet B irradiation alters the surface architecture of human B cells and impairs expression of an erythroid growth factor on their surface and on extracellular vesicles. Here, we examined the effects of ultraviolet B irradiation on the capacity of Chinese hamster ovary cells to undergo the process of exfoliation, and on the capacity of Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with flt3/flk2 cDNA to express the cytokine flt3/flk2. Our results indicate that the rate of release of shed vesicles from untransfected Chinese hamster ovary cells is decreased after one to two h, at a time when there is electron microscopic evidence for retention of vesicles at the cell surface. These changes at the cell surface precede all other apparent morphological changes (including DNA condensation in the nucleus, swelling of the mitochondria and appearance of apoptotic bodies). Furthermore, plasma membranes and shed extracellular vesicles from ultraviolet B irradiated Chinese hamster ovary cells that have been transfected with flt/flk2 cDNA fail to express the protein.

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