| Literature DB >> 31804563 |
Anna Khokhlova1, Igor Zolotovskii2, Sergei Sokolovski3, Yury Saenko2, Edik Rafailov3,4, Dmitrii Stoliarov2, Evgenia Pogodina2, Vyacheslav Svetukhin5, Vladimir Sibirny6, Andrei Fotiadi2,7.
Abstract
Here at the first time we suggested that the surface plasmon-polariton phenomenon which it is well described in metallic nanostructures could also be used for explanation of the unexpectedly strong oxidative effects of the low-intensity laser irradiation in living matters (cells, tissues, organism). We demonstrated that the narrow-band laser emitting at 1265 nm could generate significant amount of the reactive oxygen species (ROS) in both HCT116 and CHO-K1 cell cultures. Such cellular ROS effects could be explained through the generation of highly localized plasmon-polaritons on the surface of mitochondrial crista. Our experimental conditions, the low-intensity irradiation, the narrow spectrum band (<4 nm) of the laser and comparably small size bio-structures (~10 μm) were shown to be sufficient for the plasmon-polariton generation and strong laser field confinement enabling the oxidative stress observed.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31804563 PMCID: PMC6895196 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-54905-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) HCT116 cell culture before the experiment. (B) CHO-K1 cell culture before the experiment. LM ×100.
Figure 2(A) The images of the fluorescence of the HCT116 cells stained with DCFH-DA: unirradiated (control) and exposed to the laser irradiation at 1260, 1265, 1270 nm. (B) Active spectrum of the laser irradiation of 1260–1270 nm effect on the intracellular ROS concentration in HCT116 cells after. (C) The microscopic pictures of the fluorescence of the CHO-K1 cells stained with DCFH-DA: unirradiated (control) and exposed to the laser irradiation at 1260, 1265, 1270 nm. (D) Active spectrum of the laser irradiation (1260–1270 nm) effects on the intracellular ROS concentration in CHO-K1 cells. *Statistically significant differences between control and laser irradiated cells (p < 0.05).