| Literature DB >> 31739493 |
Ifigeneia V Mavragani1, Zacharenia Nikitaki1, Spyridon A Kalospyros1, Alexandros G Georgakilas1.
Abstract
Biological responses to ionizing radiation (IR) have been studied for many years, generally showing the dependence of these responses on the quality of radiation, i.e., the radiation particle type and energy, types of DNA damage, dose and dose rate, type of cells, etc. There is accumulating evidence on the pivotal role of complex (clustered) DNA damage towards the determination of the final biological or even clinical outcome after exposure to IR. In this review, we provide literature evidence about the significant role of damage clustering and advancements that have been made through the years in its detection and prediction using Monte Carlo (MC) simulations. We conclude that in the future, emphasis should be given to a better understanding of the mechanistic links between the induction of complex DNA damage, its processing, and systemic effects at the organism level, like genomic instability and immune responses.Entities:
Keywords: Monte Carlo simulations; biological response; complex DNA damage; detection of DNA damage; fluorescence microscopy; ionizing radiation; radiation biology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31739493 PMCID: PMC6895987 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11111789
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Most widely used radiation transport and track-structure Monte Carlo (MC) codes for the simulation of radiation-induced damage.
| Code | Particles | Pros | Cons | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EGS4 | photons & e- | Developed specifically for dose calculations in RT applications | Not applicable at the nanoscale due to limitations of the physics models | [ |
| FLUKA | Large set of particles | Multipurpose code covering medical, space, nuclear, and high-energy applications | Closed-source code. | [ |
| Geant4 | large set of particles | Open-source toolkit covering medical, space, nuclear, and high-energy applications. | Complex toolkit. Computationally intensive. | [ |
| Geant4-DNA | Large set of particles | Performs event-by-event simulation for track-structure applications in liquid water. | Complex toolkit. Computationally intensive. | [ |
| KURBUC | Photons, neutrons, electrons, protons, alpha, carbon ions | Performs event-by-event simulations down to very low energies for track-structure applications. | Proprietary code. | [ |
| MC4 | e-, protons, α-particles | Performs event-by-event simulations down to low-energies for track-structure applications. | Proprietary code. | [ |
| MCDS | e-, p, alpha particles & ions | Simulates in a very fast way (ranging from seconds to minutes) the induction and clustering of DNA lesions. | Lacks accuracy. Impossible to generate damage configurations for e- with energy lower than 80 eV. | [ |
| MCNP | Large set of particles | Multipurpose code covering nuclear and medical applications. | Not a free access code. | [ |
| PARTRAC | e- & ions | Performs event-by-event simulation for track-structure applications. | Proprietary code. Specific to water. | [ |
| PENELOPE | Photons, e- & e+ | Developed for dose calculations in radiotherapy applications. | Limited track-structure applications due the incomplete simulation of electron track ends. Requires users with advanced programming skills to develop their own applications. | [ |
| PEREGRINE | Large set of particles | Developed for radiotherapy treatment planning. | Gives results through a computer cluster. | [ |
| RITRACKS | e- & ions | Performs event-by-event simulation up to relativistic energies. | Distributed only to authorized users. | [ |
| Topas-nBio | large set of particles | Uses Geant4-DNA as its transport engine. | Not (yet) open-sourced. | [ |
| TRAX | e- & ions | Performs event-by-event simulation for track-structure applications in various media. | Uses atomic cross sections that are not reliable for nanoscale transport in condensed-phase media. | [ |
Figure 1Synopsis of the common steps among clustered DNA damage in situ detection techniques. Synergistic action of involved enzymes is confirmed via detection of colocalizing signal, produced by the labeled proteins of interest.
Summary of in vitro studies on biological responses to clustered DNA damage induction.
| Cell Type | Radiation Type | Biological Response | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| HeLa and oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (UMSCC74A and UMSCC6) cells | High-LET α-particles (121 keV/μm) or protons (12 keV/μm), versus low-LET protons (1 keV/μm) and X-rays | Τhe signaling and repair of complex DNA damage, particularly induced by high-LET IR is coordinated through the specific induction of H2Bub catalyzed by MSL2 and RNF20/40, a mechanism that contributes to decreased cell survival after irradiation. | [ |
| Human peripheral blood lymphocytes | Mixed beam of alpha-particles (241Am source, 0.223 Gy/min, LET: 90.9 keV/μm) and X-rays (190 kV, 4.0 mA, 0-2 Gy) | Induced DNA damage was above the level predicted by assuming additivity. | [ |
| Human dermal fibroblasts | High-LET IR with carbon ions (9.5 MeV/n; LET 190 keV/μm; calculated mean dose: 1.52 Gy) or calcium ions (7.7 MeV/n; LET 1800 keV/μm; calculated mean dose: 14.4 Gy), versus low-LET IR with 6-MV photons (10 Gy) | High-LET-IR induced clustered DNA damage and triggered profound changes in chromatin structure along particle trajectories. | [ |
| Normal human skin fibroblasts | 60Co γ-rays (LET=0.3 keV/μm), accelerated 11B (E = 8.1 MeV/nucleon, LET=138 keV/μm) ions | It has been found that heavy charged particles induce clustered DNA damage in the genome of cells that can lead not only to gene mutations, but also to large deletions. | [ |
| HeLa Kyoto cells | Pulsed UV laser (micro-irradiation, IR) | Recruitment and dissociation of 70 DNA repair proteins to laser-induced complex DNA lesions. | [ |
| Human uveal melanoma (92–1) cells | Carbon ions (LET: 80 keV/μm) and iron ions (LET: 400 keV/μm) at different doses, versus X-rays (LET: 4 keV/μm) | Heavy ions were more effective at inducing senescence than X-rays. Less-efficient repair was observed when DNA damage was induced by heavy ions compared to X-rays and most of the irreparable damage was complex of SSBs and DSBs, while DNA damage induced by X-rays was mostly repaired in 24 h. | [ |
| Human dermal fibroblasts, NFFh-TERT foreskin fibroblasts | Low-LET irradiation with 6 MV photons, versus high-LET irradiation with carbon ions (9.5 MeV/n; LET = 190 keV/μm) | High-LET irradiation caused localized energy deposition within the particle tracks and generated highly clustered DNA lesions with multiple DSBs in close proximity. | [ |
| Human osteosarcoma cell line (U2-OS) | X-rays (250 keV, 16 mA; LET: 2 keV/μm), versus heavy ions: 238U ions (LET: 15,000 keV/μm), 207Pb ions (LET: 13,500 keV/μm), 197Au ions (LET: 13,000 keV/μm), 119Sn ions (LET: 7,880 keV/μm), 59Ni (LET: 3,430 keV/μm), 48Ti (LET: 2,180 keV/μm), 14N ions (LET: 400 keV/μm), and 12C ions (LET: 170 keV/μm) | DSB complexity plays a critical role in the decision for DSB end-resection in G1-cells. | [ |
| Human cells (fibroblasts, HBECs) | 1 Gy of Si (LET: 44 keV/μm) or Fe (LET: 150 keV/μm) ions | Direct visualization of clustered DNA lesions at the single-cell level using 53BP1, XRCC1, and hOGG1 as surrogate markers for DSBs, SSBs, and base damage, respectively, reveals that most complex DNA damage is not repaired in human cells. | [ |
| Human Lung Adenocarcinoma (A5490) cells | 12C ions (62 MeV, LET: 290 keV/μm), versus 60Co γ-rays (1–3 Gy) | Carbon ions were three times more cytotoxic than γ-rays. | [ |
| HF12 primary male human fibroblast cells | 238Pu α-particles (range, ∼20 μm; peak energy, 3.26 MeV; LET=121.4 keV/μm) | Many α-particle-induced mutations are large deletions. | [ |
High-linear energy transfer (LET) radiation triggering immune responses.
| Biological System/Cell Type | Radiation Type | Immune Response | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of head and neck (HNSCC) cancer patients | Intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), (51–74 Gy total dose, 1.6–3 Gy dose/fraction) | Expression of the FXDR, SESN1, GADD45, DDB2, and MDM2 radiation-response genes were altered in the PBMCs of patients after RT. All changes were long-lasting, detectable one month after RT. Local tumor irradiation induces systemic changes in the level of immune and inflammation-related plasma proteins. | [ |
| Murine CT26 colorectal cancer cells | 8 Gy proton beams at 1.09 keV/μm (low), 2.58 keV/μm (medium) and 7.7 keV/μm (high) LET. | Increase in percentage expression of immune markers (OX40L, CD40, ICAM-1, and MHC-I) in high-LET irradiated cells. | [ |
| Human cancer cell lines: TE2, KYSE70, A549, NCI-H460 and WiDr | Carbon ions (290 MeV/n, LET 30 keV/µm) | Carbon-ion beams significantly increased HMGB1 (a damage-associated molecular pattern—DAMP) levels in the culture supernatants. | [ |
| NCI-H446 (lung tumor cells) | Carbon ions (290 MeV/n, LET 13 keV/µm) | Cyto- and chemokine response release by tumor cells after irradiation. (TNF-α) | [ |
| Tumor-bearing mice (C3H/He, Balb/c nude mice) | Carbon ion irradiation (290 MeV/n, LET=77 keV/µm) | Increased cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTL)-associated lysis of isolated tumor splenocytes after carbon ion irradiation treatment with supplementary intratumoral dendritic cell (DC) injection. | [ |
| Tumors of mouse squamous cell carcinoma (NR-S1) cells inoculated in the legs of C3H/HeSlc mice | Carbon ions (290 MeV/n, 6-cm spread-out Bragg peak, 6 Gy) | Even when exposed to the same equivalent doses, carbon ion therapy might activate the immune system to a greater extent than conventional RT. | [ |
| NR-S1 and SCCVII (squamous cell | Carbon ions (290 MeV/n, LET 50 keV/µm) | Significant C-ion induced upregulation of stress-responsive and cell-communication genes common to different tumor types. | [ |
| Rat skin | 56Fe ions (1.01 GeV/n) | 56Fe ion radiation significantly induced inflammation-related genes, including many in the categories of ‘immune response’, ‘response to stress’, ‘signal transduction’, and ‘response to biotic stress’, that contribute to carcinogenesis. | [ |
| Highly aggressive HT1080 human fibrosarcoma and LM8 mouse osteosarcoma cells | Carbon ion beams (290 MeV/n), versus X-rays | When compared with photon irradiation, carbon ion exposure reduced the number of distant lung metastasis in carcinoma models in immunocompetent mice. | [ |
Figure 2Linking processing of clustered DNA damage and its biological consequences. (a) Formation of fluorescent γH2AX–OGG1 clusters in normal human bronchial epithelial cells at 1 h post-irradiation with heavy ions of varying LETs (adapted from [178]). Colocalization parameter (Pclc) values (as described in Section 3.5.2) increase with increasing LET; (b) induction of complex DNA damage and biological consequences in mammalian cells. Long-term consequences of DNA damage include different forms of genomic instability, which significantly contribute to carcinogenesis. Furthermore, processing of unrepaired or persistent clustered DNA damage promotes cell death. Activation of DNA damage response (DDR) and repair machinery can trigger the extracellular release of diverse signatures of ‘Danger’ signals or damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs: ATP, short DNAs/RNAs, ROS, heat shock proteins (HSPs) and others) [179].