| Literature DB >> 36077349 |
Munir A Al-Zeer1, Franziska Prehn2, Stefan Fiedler3, Ulrich Lienert4, Michael Krisch5, Johanna Berg1, Jens Kurreck1, Guido Hildebrandt2, Elisabeth Schültke2.
Abstract
Radiotherapy is an important component in the treatment of lung cancer, one of the most common cancers worldwide, frequently resulting in death within only a few years of diagnosis. In order to evaluate new therapeutic approaches and compare their efficiency with regard to tumour control at a pre-clinical stage, it is important to develop standardized samples which can serve as inter-institutional outcome controls, independent of differences in local technical parameters or specific techniques. Recent developments in 3D bioprinting techniques could provide a sophisticated solution to this challenge. We have conducted a pilot project to evaluate the suitability of standardized samples generated from 3D printed human lung cancer cells in radiotherapy studies. The samples were irradiated at high dose rates using both broad beam and microbeam techniques. We found the 3D printed constructs to be sufficiently mechanically stable for use in microbeam studies with peak doses up to 400 Gy to test for cytotoxicity, DNA damage, and cancer cell death in vitro. The results of this study show how 3D structures generated from human lung cancer cells in an additive printing process can be used to study the effects of radiotherapy in a standardized manner.Entities:
Keywords: 3D bioprinting; DNA damage; experimental radiotherapy; gammaH2AX; high dose rate radiotherapy; human lung cancer cells; microbeam radiotherapy (MRT)
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36077349 PMCID: PMC9456381 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23179951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1The 3D bioprinted sample (a) mounted for irradiation vertically in a 24-well plate (b). The dark stripes, caused by the peak doses of MRT, are visible on the self-developing Gafchromic™ film placed on the back of the 24-well plate, behind the samples, to record the irradiation pattern. Microphotograph of the Gafchromic™ film after irradiation (c).
Figure 2Horizontal intensity profiles form MBI peak doses of 40 Gy (a) and 400 Gy (b), obtained from HD-V2 Gafchromic™ film scans.
Figure 3Microscopy image of live/dead stain (a), quantification of living and dead cells (b), and metabolic activity of the printed A549 cells (c). (a) Qualitative viability staining of living and dead A549 printed cells in the constructs at 48 h after irradiation using calcein-AM (live shown in green) and ethidium homodimer-1 (dead shown in red). Scale bar: 200 µm. The staining profile in the microscopy images mirrors the beam profile recorded on the film. (b) The estimated percentages of living and dead cells quantified using ImageJ. (c) The XTT test was used to assess the metabolic activity of A549 printed cells after exposure to different doses of radiotherapy at the relevant time points. Values were calculated as X-fold induction of lysis control. Data are presented as mean value ± SD; n = 3; * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.
Figure 4Bioprinted A549 cells immuno-stained against γH2AX following irradiation with an array of microbeams (a) and results of the immunoblot (b,c). (a) Shown are 10 µm sections of hydrogel-based 3D matrices generated from A549 lung cancer cells, fixed at 36 h after irradiation with peak doses of either 40 Gy or 400 Gy, as indicated. The γH2AX staining (green channel) indicates DNA double-strand breaks. The samples were also stained with an antibodies against pan-cytokeratin to confirm their character as epithelial cells (red channel). DAPI was used for nuclear counterstaining (blue channel). Scale bar: 50 µm. (b) Control and irradiated (40 and 400 Gy) samples were harvested 36 h after irradiation and subjected to immunoblot analysis for γH2AX and β-actin. The results are representative of two independent experiments. (c) The band densities from (b) were quantified and normalized to corresponding band densities of the β-actin loading control. Alterations in expression levels in the samples irradiated with MBI peak doses of 40 Gy and 400 Gy, compared to non-irradiated controls, are represented as mean fold change ± SD, n = 2.