| Literature DB >> 31443529 |
Ioana Maria Colceriu-Șimon1, Mihaela Hedeșiu2, Valentin Toma3, Gabriel Armencea4, Alin Moldovan3, Gabriela Știufiuc5, Bogdan Culic6, Viorica Țărmure1, Cristian Dinu4, Ioana Berindan-Neagoe3,7,8, Rareș Ionuț Știufiuc9,10, Mihaela Băciuț11.
Abstract
Biological effects of low-dose ionizing radiation (IR) have been unclear until now. Saliva, because of the ease of collection, could be valuable in studying low-dose IR effects by means of surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). The objective of our study was to compare the salivary SER spectra recorded before and after low-dose IR exposure in the case of pediatric patients (PP). Unstimulated saliva was collected from ten PP before and after irradiation with a cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) machine used for diagnostic purposes. The SERS measurements have been recorded on dried saliva samples using a solid nanosilver plasmonic substrate synthesized using an original method developed in our laboratory. The experimental results showed that salivary SER spectra are dominated by three vibrational bands (441,735 and 2107 cm-1) that can be assigned to bending and stretching vibrations of salivary thiocyanate (SCN-). After exposure, an immediate increase of vibrational bands assigned to SCN- has been recorded in the case of all samples, probably as a result of IR interaction with oral cavity. This finding suggests that SCN- could be used as a valuable biomarker for the detection and identification of low-dose radiation effects.Entities:
Keywords: Raman spectroscopy; ionizing radiation; pediatric patients; thiocyanate
Year: 2019 PMID: 31443529 PMCID: PMC6787699 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics9030101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1UV–VIS absorption spectrum of the filtered silver colloid. The inset presents an optical image of the concentrated colloidal solution. The full width at half maximum (FWHM) value is 85 nm.
Figure 2Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) image of the silver nanoparticles (a). Statistical analysis of nanoparticles diameters obtained from TEM images (b).
Figure 3Topographic Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) image of the solid plasmonic nanosilver substrate (a). Height profile of the substrate (b).
Figure 4SERS spectrum of a dried solution of Methylene Blue (MB, 1 mM) recorded using a 785 nm excitation laser.
Figure 5A typical Raman spectrum of dried saliva, recorded using a 785 nm laser.
Figure 6A typical SER spectrum of saliva (λ = 785 nm). The red arrows indicate the thiocyanate specific vibrational bands.
Assignment of the vibrational peaks recorded in the SERS spectra of human saliva.
| Raman Band (cm−1) | Vibrational Mode | Assignment |
|---|---|---|
| 441 | S−C≡N bending vibration | Thiocyanate |
| 620 | C-C twisting mode | Phenylalanine |
| 650 | C-C twisting mode | Phenylalanine |
| 735 | C−S stretching vibration | Thiocyanate |
| 880 | v (C-C) | Hydroxyproline |
| 1002 | νS (C-C) | Phenylalanine |
| 1047 | ν (C-O), ν (C-N) | Proteins |
| 1208 | ν (C-C6H5) | Tryptophan |
| 1452 | δ (C-H) | Collagen, lipids |
| 1661 | ν (C=C) | Amide I |
| 2107 | −C≡N stretching vibration | Thiocyanate |
Figure 7Superposition of the SER spectra recorded before (green spectra) and after irradiation (purple spectra) for one of the patients involved in this study. The spectra have been recorded using an excitation wavelength of 785 nm.