| Literature DB >> 25974639 |
A Gianoncelli1, L Vaccari1, G Kourousias1, D Cassese2, D E Bedolla3, S Kenig1, P Storici1, M Lazzarino2, M Kiskinova1.
Abstract
Radiation damage of biological samples remains a limiting factor in high resolution X-ray microscopy (XRM). Several studies have attempted to evaluate the extent and the effects of radiation damage, proposing strategies to minimise or prevent it. The present work aims to assess the impact of soft X-rays on formalin fixed cells on a systematic manner. The novelty of this approach resides on investigating the radiation damage not only with XRM, as often reported in relevant literature on the topic, but by coupling it with two additional independent non-destructive microscopy methods: Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) and FTIR Microscopy (FTIRM). Human Embryonic Kidney 293 cells were exposed to different radiation doses at 1 keV. In order to reveal possible morphological and biochemical changes, the irradiated cells were systematically analysed with AFM and FTIRM before and after. Results reveal that while cell morphology is not substantially affected, cellular biochemical profile changes significantly and progressively when increasing dose, resulting in a severe breakdown of the covalent bonding network. This information impacts most soft XRM studies on fixed cells and adds an in-depth understanding of the radiation damage for developing better prevention strategies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25974639 PMCID: PMC4431353 DOI: 10.1038/srep10250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1AFM images of the three analysed formalin-fixed cells.
AFM images of the three analysed formalin-fixed cells (Cell1 a–e, Cell2 f–j, Cell3 k–o) during the five experimental steps: Air-dried (a,f,k), Vacuum-dried (b,j,l), low X-ray dose exposure compatible with low resolution STXM (c,h,m), medium X-ray dose exposure compatible with high-resolution STXM (d,i,n) and finally high X-ray dose exposure compatible with XRF (e,j,o).
Figure 2FTIR Chemical Images.
Chemical images (54 × 96 μm2 area at 6 μm lateral resolution) of the distribution of cellular Proteins (integral intensity 1702–1480 cm−1), Lipids (integral intensity 2988–2830 cm−1) and Nucleic Acids (integral intensity 1270–1190 cm−1) at different experimental steps for Cell1. The optical image of the cell acquired after Step 4 is also shown. Scale bar: Proteins (Min: 0 – Max: 10.3 a.u.); Lipids (Min: 0 – Max: 2.3 a.u.); Nucleic Acids (Min: 0 – Max: 0.65 a.u.). Relative intensity variations can also be deduced (0-1).
Figure 3Absorbance spectra of the same nuclear point of HEK293T Cell1.
a- Absorbance spectra of the same nuclear point of HEK293T Cell1 at the different experimental stages. Step 0 – air dried cells; Step 1 – vacuum dried cells; Step 2 – low dose exposure (2∙106 Gray); Step 3 – medium dose exposure (2.2∙107 Gray cumulative dose); Step 4 - High dose exposure (6.22∙108 Gray cumulative dose). Each spectrum is presented with a 0.1 a.u. offset for clarity reasons. b- Second derivative spectra (Savitzky-Golay filter with 13 smoothing points) of the same nuclear point of HEK293T Cell1 at the different experimental stages. Each spectrum is presented with a 0.0001 a.u. offset.
Figure 4Density maps for three analysed cells.
Density maps of the three analysed cells measured after the three different levels of soft X-ray doses: 2 × 106 Gray (a), 2.2 × 107 Gray (b) and 6.22 × 108 Gray (c). The unit of measure on the scale bar is g/cm3.
Scheme of the experimental design.
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| 0 | Air-drying (overnight) | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| 1 | Vacuum drying (p <5∙10−5 mbar, 1h30) | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| 2 | Low-dose exposure (2∙106 Gy) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| 3 | Medium-dose exposure (2∙107 Gy) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| 4 | High-dose exposure (6∙108 Gy) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
At each step of the experiment, the performed measurements are marked.