| Literature DB >> 31687089 |
Angela Privat-Maldonado1, Anke Schmidt2, Abraham Lin1,3, Klaus-Dieter Weltmann2, Kristian Wende2, Annemie Bogaerts1, Sander Bekeschus2.
Abstract
Physical plasmas generate unique mixes of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS or ROS). Only a bit more than a decade ago, these plasmas, operating at body temperature, started to be considered for medical therapy with considerably little mechanistic redox chemistry or biomedical research existing on that topic at that time. Today, a vast body of evidence is available on physical plasma-derived ROS, from their spatiotemporal resolution in the plasma gas phase to sophisticated chemical and biochemical analysis of these species once dissolved in liquids. Data from in silico analysis dissected potential reaction pathways of plasma-derived reactive species with biological membranes, and in vitro and in vivo experiments in cell and animal disease models identified molecular mechanisms and potential therapeutic benefits of physical plasmas. In 2013, the first medical plasma systems entered the European market as class IIa devices and have proven to be a valuable resource in dermatology, especially for supporting the healing of chronic wounds. The first results in cancer patients treated with plasma are promising, too. Due to the many potentials of this blooming new field ahead, there is a need to highlight the main concepts distilled from plasma research in chemistry and biology that serve as a mechanistic link between plasma physics (how and which plasma-derived ROS are produced) and therapy (what is the medical benefit). This inevitably puts cellular membranes in focus, as these are the natural interphase between ROS produced by plasmas and translation of their chemical reactivity into distinct biological responses.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31687089 PMCID: PMC6800937 DOI: 10.1155/2019/9062098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Schematic of two categories of commonly used plasma devices for medical application: dielectric barrier discharges and plasma jets. In dielectric barrier discharges, plasma is generated in atmospheric air directly onto the biological target (a), while in plasma jets, plasma is generated inside the device and delivered to the target via a flow of gas (b).
Figure 2Heat map of the current state of knowledge of cold plasmas for biomedicine. Blue: known and well-characterized commercial plasma sources (left) and reported effects of plasma therapies in in vivo models and human patients (right). Yellow: many biologically relevant plasma-generated ROS in air or in liquids have been described (left); however, it is still a challenge to tune the setups to deliver specific ROS mixes for different biomedical applications. In the same way, multiple effects of plasma in cells have been reported, yet the mechanisms of action of plasma-generated ROS in cells has not been fully unraveled (right). Red: the current bottleneck in the field is the little information available on how to use plasma to activate specific signalling pathways and evoke a desired effect in cells to design better and more effective therapies.
Box 1Current challenges in the field of plasma medicine.
Box 2Current opportunities in the field of plasma medicine.
Figure 3Scheme of hormetic responses. In the concept of hormesis, small concentrations of a given substance or molecules (including ROS) can have opposing effects between small and large concentrations.
Overview of reported studies on penetration depths of plasma-derived ROS in original and artificial tissue models.
| Penetration depth | Plasma treatment | Tissue or biosurface studied | References |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 10 | kINPen09 | Human skin | [ |
| 36.8 ± 14.2 | kINPen09 |
| [ |
| ~65 | MicroPlaSter | Skin wounds in 129 Sv/Ev female mice | [ |
| 2.8 mm | Helium plasma jet | Bladder carcinoma tumors in BALB/c nu/nu male mice | [ |
| ~50 | Atmospheric-pressure helium plasma jet | Skin of BALB/c female mice | [ |
| ~300–400 | kINPen09 | Hair follicles | [ |
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| 1 mm | Helium plasma jet | ROS delivery through pig skin into liquid | [ |
| 500–1500 | Helium+0.5% O2 plasma jet | ROS delivery through pig muscle into various liquids | [ |
| 100–470 | Helium+0.5% O2 plasma jet | KI starch-containing gelatin films | [ |
| 150 | Helium plasma jet | 2,7-Dichlorodihydrofluorescein/gelatin model | [ |
| 150 | Helium plasma jet | ROS sensor-containing phospholipid vesicles in gelatin | [ |
| 1 mm | Helium linear- and cross-field plasma jets | ROS delivery through gelatin or gelatin+NaNO2 films into distilled water | [ |
| 1 mm | Helium plasma jet | ROS delivery through gelatin, gelatin+BSA, or poly(vinyl alcohol) targets into various liquids | [ |
| 6 mm (6 min) | Argon plasma jet | KI starch gel | [ |
| 2 mm (36 min) | 2% agarose | ||
| 1.5–5.8 mm | Low-temperature plasma jet | ROS delivery through agarose films into liquid | [ |
| 1–2 mm | Helium plasma jet | Agarose films | [ |
| 2 mm | Helium plasma jet | DNA damage in HEPES solution, phospholipid vesicles, or DNA embedded in gelatin | [ |
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| Plasma ROS: 10–20 | Low-power He-O2 plasma | Highly hydrated biofilms and plasma-tissue interaction models | [ |
∗Retrospectively measured with software from published images.
Figure 4Models for the study of the penetration of plasma-generated ROS into tissue. (a) In vitro approach for the analysis of ROS penetration using 0.02% methyl red as a reporter of ROS in 0.5% agarose gel. The treatment applied with Ar/O2 (1%) kINPen MED at 4 mm distance demonstrates that the penetration depth is directly proportional to the treatment time (unpublished/original data). (b) Proposed mechanisms of action of plasma ROS and concomitant effects in tissues. The primary effect is exerted in the first layers of cells that directly interact with the short-lived ROS. At this level, oxidative damage is induced in the extracellular matrix, cell membranes, and intracellular components of cells located in the outermost region of the tissue. The long-lived ROS able to penetrate into deeper regions of the tissue elicit a secondary oxidative effect in cells. However, the effect of plasma extends to more profound regions of the tissue due to the oxidation of redox-sensitive cysteine and thiols in proteins with paracrine effects and via cell-to-cell communication.
Figure 5Overview of cold plasma-mediated signalling pathways, including oxidative stress (Nrf2), mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase, p53, Wnt/β-catenin, cytoskeletal, cell adhesion or growth factor (GF) signalling, and differentiation.
Overview of cold plasma-mediated signalling pathways, including oxidative stress (Nrf2), mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase, p53, Wnt/β-catenin, cytoskeletal, cell adhesion, or growth factor signalling and differentiation. He-GIW: helium-guided ionization wave; SMD: surface microdischarge.
| Signalling | Cell type(s) | Plasma source | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nrf2 | Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | He-GIW | [ |
| THP-1 monocytes (human) | kINPen | [ | |
| Breast, pancreatic, colon cancer, and melanoma | kINPen | [ | |
| Osteosarcoma cells | kINPen | [ | |
| Periodontal ligament (PDL) cells | Plasma one dental | [ | |
| Rat skin cells | Single-jet system | [ | |
| Murine skin cells | kINPen | [ | |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | kINPen | [ | |
| T-lymphoblastoid leukemia cells | DBD | [ | |
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| NF | Monocytes, THP-1, and Jurkat | kINPen | [ |
| Cancer cells | DBD | [ | |
| HNC cells | Spray-type jet | [ | |
| Cancer cells (G631) | APPJ | [ | |
| Cancer cells (ES2) | NEAPP | [ | |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | kINPen | [ | |
| Cancer cells (A375, 875) | Surface BD | [ | |
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| p53 | Melanoma cells | SMD | [ |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | DBD | [ | |
| Cancer cells | Different | [ | |
| Cancer cells (HSC3) | DBD oxygen | [ | |
| Cancer cells | DBD | [ | |
| T98G, A549, HEK293, and MRC5 | Soft plasma jet | [ | |
| Periodontal ligament (PDL) cells | Plasma one | [ | |
| Melanocyte cancer cells | APPJ | [ | |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | kINPen | [ | |
| Murine skin cells | kINPen | [ | |
| Cancer cells (Huh7, Alexander, and HepG2) | Air based | [ | |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | DBD | [ | |
| T-lymphoblastoid leukemia cells | DBD | [ | |
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| Wnt/ | Melanoma cells (SK-Mel-28) | kINPen | [ |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | DBD | [ | |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | DBD | [ | |
| MNC | DBD | [ | |
| Normal and cancer cells | Jet | [ | |
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| Cytoskeletal | Skin cells | DBD, kINPen | [ |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | DBD | [ | |
| Cancer cells (BHP10, TPC1) | Spray-type jet | [ | |
| Human dermal fibroblasts | Jet like | [ | |
| Skin cells (HaCaT, MRC5), melanoma cells | kINPen | [ | |
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| Differentiation growth factors | Neuroblastoma 2a (N2a) | DBD | [ |
| Keratinocytes (HaCaT) | kINPen | [ | |
| Human 3D skin model | Single jet (MEF) | [ | |
Figure 6The cell membrane is the key compartment that plasma-derived ROS need to penetrate or interact with to elicit biological responses. While some ROS are able to penetrate cellular membranes (e.g., ozone, nitric oxide and atomic oxygen), other more polar ROS cannot (e.g., singlet delta oxygen, nitrite, hydroxyl radical, superoxide anion, hydrogen, and peroxynitrite). Hydrogen peroxide is actively transported into the cells via transporters such as aquaporins.
Overview of the main components of the cell membrane and their role in the response to plasma treatment.
| Molecule | Key physiological role(s) | Reported role in response to plasma | Redox-mediated downstream effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transporters | |||
| AQP1 | Water, H2O2 [ | Favored H2O2 permeation into intracellular compartment [ | Signalling via the Keap1/Nrf2 system [ |
| AQP3 | Water, urea, H2O2 [ | Unknown | Activation of the Nox-2 and PI3K/Akt or MAPK pathway [ |
| AQP5 | Water and H2O2 [ | Unknown | Role in tumor formation related to its phosphorylation status [ |
| AQP8 | Water, H2O2 [ | Required for anticancer effect of plasma-treated medium (PTM) on glioblastoma cells [ | EGF induces AQP8 expression via EGF/EGFR-ERK1/2 pathway [ |
| AQP9 | Water, H2O2 [ | Its absence does not impair H2O2 transport upon treatment with PTM in glioblastoma cells [ | Target of protein kinase A [ |
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| Cell membrane receptors | |||
| Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) | Receptor tyrosine kinase involved in signal transduction to stimulate proliferation and cellular growth and block apoptosis | EGFR was degraded and dysfunctional in EGFR-overexpressing oral squamous carcinoma after plasma treatment [ | Moderate exogenous H2O2 induces the redox activation of EGRF and increases protein kinase activity [ |
| Transient receptor proteins (TRP) | Calcium-permeable and voltage-independent cation channels which act as multimodal sensors of external stimuli | Unknown | In response to oxidative stress, TRPC3 and TRPC4 increase the intracellular Ca2+ concentration that leads to cell death [ |
| Integrins | Responsible for cell-to-matrix and cell-to-cell adhesion. Integrins transduce the external signals to the cytoskeleton | DBD/air plasma enhanced expression of | Integrin-linked kinase (ILK) signalling via PKB/Akt can suppress apoptosis and anoikis [ |
| E-cadherin | Calcium-dependent cell-to-cell adhesion receptor | kINPen plasma jet treatment decreases E-cadherin expression in HaCaT cells [ | Oxidative stress causes the selective disruption of E-cadherin and beta-catenin cell adhesion complexes [ |
| Focal adhesions | Adhesive contact that anchors the cell to the extracellular matrix that mediates mechanical and biochemical signalling | Plasma increased the amount of vinculin and the focal adhesion size in WTDF3 mouse fibroblasts [ | Oxidative stress activates focal adhesion kinase by Src kinase- and PI3 kinase-dependent mechanisms, which accelerates cell migration [ |
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| Lipids | |||
| Cholesterol | Provides rigidity to the cell membrane and controls membrane fluidity [ | When present at low concentrations in the cell membrane, plasma oxidation facilitates pore formation and passing of ROS [ | Oxidation by-products such as HO•2 can generate intracellular H2O2 and •OH, and propagate lipid oxidation [ |
| Phospholipids | Main component of biological membranes | Plasma oxidizes phospholipids and affects lipid mobility [ | Apoptotic cells presenting OxPLs in the cell membrane are eliminated by M2 macrophages [ |
| Fatty acids | Form the hydrophobic hydrocarbon tails of phospholipids | Oxidation product NO2-FAs inhibit activation of NF | NO2-FAs stop the lipid oxidation propagation and protein nitration [ |
| Lipid rafts | Modulate distribution of receptors and signalling molecules in the cell membrane [ | In combination with hyperthermia, plasma activates the FA receptor (abundant in lipid rafts) and causes FA-induced apoptosis [ | Activation and aggregation of death receptors such as FAs and TNFR1 located in lipid rafts and enhanced activation of kinases recruited at the raft site [ |
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| Catalytic enzymes | |||
| NADPH oxidase (Nox) | Transmembrane enzyme that catalyzes the reduction of extracellular oxygen to O2•− | Inhibition with DPI attenuates the intracellular presence of ROS after plasma treatment, indicating a stimulation of endogenous ROS production with plasma [ | Contributes to the elimination of malignant cells via HOCl and the NO/ONOO− signalling pathways |
| Catalase | Membrane-bound enzyme that decomposes H2O2 into water and oxygen. When membrane-bound, it provides increased resistance to exogenous H2O2 and favors tumor progression | Plasma-generated ROS supposedly induce the formation of singlet oxygen that inactivates membrane-bound catalase to favor apoptosis [ | In malignant cells, catalase interferes with HOCl signalling by decomposing H2O2 and interferes with NO/ONOO− signalling through oxidation of NO and decomposition of ONOO− to favor tumor progression |