| Literature DB >> 23577291 |
Lyubov V Titova1, Ayesheshim K Ayesheshim, Andrey Golubov, Dawson Fogen, Rocio Rodriguez-Juarez, Frank A Hegmann, Olga Kovalchuk.
Abstract
Recent emergence and growing use of terahertz (THz) radiation for medical imaging and public security screening raise questions on reasonable levels of exposure and health consequences of this form of electromagnetic radiation. In particular, picosecond-duration THz pulses have shown promise for novel diagnostic imaging techniques. However, the effects of THz pulses on human cells and tissues thus far remain largely unknown. We report on the investigation of the biological effects of pulsed THz radiation on artificial human skin tissues. We observe that exposure to intense THz pulses for ten minutes leads to a significant induction of H2AX phosphorylation, indicating that THz pulse irradiation may cause DNA damage in exposed skin tissue. At the same time, we find a THz-pulse-induced increase in the levels of several proteins responsible for cell-cycle regulation and tumor suppression, suggesting that DNA damage repair mechanisms are quickly activated. Furthermore, we find that the cellular response to pulsed THz radiation is significantly different from that induced by exposure to UVA (400 nm).Entities:
Keywords: (170.0170) Medical optics and biotechnology; (170.1420) Biology; (170.6930) Tissue; (170.7160) Ultrafast technology
Year: 2013 PMID: 23577291 PMCID: PMC3617718 DOI: 10.1364/BOE.4.000559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Opt Express ISSN: 2156-7085 Impact factor: 3.732
Fig. 1Exposure of artificial human skin tissues equivalents to intense THz pulses. (a) Schematic of the tilted-pulse-front THz pulse source and EpiDermFT tissue in a single-well insert placed at the focus of THz beam. (b) Waveform of a 1.0 μJ THz pulse and (c) corresponding amplitude spectrum. (d) Histology of the EpiDermFT tissue sample (400X image by MatTek Corporation, used with permission). The stained paraffin section reveals epidermis containing basal, spinous, granular keratinocytes and stratum corneum. The dermis contains numerous viable fibroblasts. (e) Image of the THz beam spot size at the sample location. The 1/e2 diameter of the THz beam is 1.5 mm. The dashed square shows the size of the area (2x2 mm2) that was cut out to separate exposed from unexposed tissue.
Fig. 2Induction of γH2AX in artificial human skin tissues equivalents following 10 minute exposure to either high (1.0 μJ) or low (0.1 μJ) energy THz pulses, or 2 minute exposure to UVA (400 nm) pulses (0.080 μJ), as compared to control (CT) samples. The pulse repetition rate was 1 kHz. Actin was used as a loading control. Each experiment included pooled lysates from three tissues for each exposure condition with equal representation for each tissue.
Fig. 3Confocal fluorescence images of tissue sample cross-sections showing the incidence of γH2AX foci (localized green spots). Blue spots indicate cell nuclei. γH2AX-harboring cells (markers for double strand breaks in DNA) inside cell nuclei appear as blue-green spots. Panels from left to right show representative images for control (CT), low THz pulse energy (0.1 μJ), high THz pulse energy (1.0 μJ), and UVA-exposed tissues. Scale bar is 100 μm.
Fig. 4Expression of tumor suppressor and cell cycle regulatory proteins in artificial human 3D skin tissues equivalents following 10 minute exposure to either high (1.0 μJ) or low (0.1 μJ) energy THz pulses, or two minute exposure to 0.080 μJ UVA (400 nm) pulses, as compared to unexposed control (CT) samples. Actin was used as a loading control.