Integrin-mediated adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins confers resistance to radiation- or drug-induced genotoxic injury. To analyse the underlying mechanisms specific for beta 1-integrins, wild-type beta 1A-integrin-expressing GD25 beta 1A cells were compared to GD25 beta 1B cells, which express signaling-incompetent beta 1B variants. Cells grown on fibronectin, collagen-III, beta 1-integrin-IgG or poly-l-lysine were exposed to 0-6 Gy X-rays in presence or depletion of growth factors and phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI3K) inhibitors (LY294002, wortmannin). In order to test the relevance of these findings in tumor cells, human A-172 glioma cells were examined under the same conditions after siRNA-mediated silencing of beta 1-integrins. We found that beta 1A-integrin-mediated adhesion to fibronectin, collagen-III or beta 1-IgG was essential for cell survival after radiation- induced genotoxic injury. Mediated by PI3K, pro-survival beta 1A-integrin/Akt signaling was critically involved in this process. Additionally, the beta 1-integrin downstream targets p130Cas and paxillin-impaired survival-regulating PI3K-dependent JNK. In A-172 glioma cells, beta 1-integrin knockdown and PI3K inhibition confirmed the central role of beta 1-integrins in Akt- and p130Cas/paxillin-mediated prosurvival signaling. These findings suggest beta 1-integrins as critical regulators of cell survival after radiation- induced genotoxic injury. Elucidation of the molecular circuitry of prosurvival beta 1-integrin-mediated signaling in tumor cells may promote the development of innovative molecular-targeted therapeutic antitumor strategies.