| Literature DB >> 28622395 |
Kinan Alhallak1, Samir V Jenkins2, David E Lee3, Nicholas P Greene3, Kyle P Quinn1, Robert J Griffin2, Ruud P M Dings2, Narasimhan Rajaram1.
Abstract
Radiation resistance remains a significant problem for cancer patients, especially due to the time required to definitively determine treatment outcome. For fractionated radiation therapy, nearly 7 to 8 weeks can elapse before a tumor is deemed to be radiation-resistant. We used the optical redox ratio of FAD / ( FAD + NADH ) to identify early metabolic changes in radiation-resistant lung cancer cells. These radiation-resistant human A549 lung cancer cells were developed by exposing the parental A549 cells to repeated doses of radiation (2 Gy). Although there were no significant differences in the optical redox ratio between the parental and resistant cell lines prior to radiation, there was a significant decrease in the optical redox ratio of the radiation-resistant cells 24 h after a single radiation exposure ( p = 0.01 ). This change in the redox ratio was indicative of increased catabolism of glucose in the resistant cells after radiation and was associated with significantly greater protein content of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 ( HIF - 1 ? ), a key promoter of glycolytic metabolism. Our results demonstrate that the optical redox ratio could provide a rapid method of determining radiation resistance status based on early metabolic changes in cancer cells.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28622395 PMCID: PMC5499259 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.22.6.060502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170
Fig. 1(a) Flowchart depicting the development of stable cultures of radiation-resistant A549 cells (A549-RR). (b) Clonogenic assay for survival of the A549-RR cells compared with the A549 cells when exposed to 2 Gy of radiation. Colonies () were quantified by fixing cells in methanol/acetic acid and staining with crystal violet. The number of identified colonies at 0 Gy divided by the seeding density was used to normalize the number of colonies formed per cell line at the various doses.
Fig. 2Radiation causes a decrease in the optical redox ratio after 24 h in the radiation-resistant cells, indicating increased glycolytic metabolism. (a) Representative redox images of parental and radiation-resistant A549 cells at baseline prior to radiation and 24 h after 2 Gy of radiation. (b) Quantification of redox ratio images indicates a statistically significant decrease in the optical redox ratio 24 h after radiation in the A549-RR cells compared with the parental A549 cells (). (c) Differences in the n-OCR (calculated as OCR/PPR) are consistent with the optical redox ratio. Asterisks placed above bars indicate statistical significance. Error bars in panels (b) and (c) represent standard deviation of the mean plate value.
Fig. 3Radiation causes a significant increase in in the radiation-resistant cells 24 h after radiation. Western blots of protein expression demonstrate statistically significant differences between A549 and A549-RR cells at baseline and 24 h after radiation, indicating reoxygenation-induced expression in the A549-RR cells. Representative images are from the same gel and the same image. The 45-kDa actin band in the Ponceau S stain was used as a loading control.