ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Investigation of the level of DNA double-strand breaks and mechanisms of cell death under irradiation of lung cancer and melanoma cells with ultra-high dose rate photon radiation

About authors

1 Russian Scientific Center of Roentgenoradiology, Moscow

2 Joint Institute for High Temperatures of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow

3 Research Institute of Technical Physics and Automation of Rosatom, Moscow

Correspondence should be addressed: Vladimir K. Bojenko
Profsoyuznaya 86, Moscow, 117997; ur.liam@oknejobv

About paper

Funding: this work was supported by the Russian Science Foundation (Project 15-10355).

Received: 2018-08-15 Accepted: 2018-11-28 Published online: 2018-12-09
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Just like chemotherapy and surgery, radiation therapy is an important cancer treatment modality. Among the problems that have been receiving a lot of attention lately are individual sensitivity of patients to radiation and the choice of adequate radiation strategy [13]. The efficacy of treatment can be improved by applying ultrahigh dose rate radiation, which at the same time can reduce the adverse effects of radiotherapy. However, some authors report that increased dose rates produce no biological effects, whereas others point to severe biological damage caused by radiation with ultrahigh dose rates [47]. Our previous in vitro study [8] has demonstrated that exposure of peripheral blood lymphocytes to photon radiation with dose rates of ~ 109 Gy/s entails some effects different from those of standard dose rates used in conventional radiation therapy. Our findings suggest that ultra high-dose photon radiation may be more beneficial for the patient in terms of its therapeutic ratio and the mechanisms of damage induced. Photon radiation delivered at ultrahigh dose rates may one day become a new component of cancer treatment.
The aim of this work was to study the effect of ultrahigh dose rate photon radiation generated by the experimental Mir-M machine on human cancer cell lines in vitro.

METHODS

Photon pulses were generated by the experimental high-current nanosecond electron accelerator Mir-M developed at the Joint Institute for High Temperatures, RAS (Moscow). The dose rates ranged from 1 × 109 to 4 × 109 Gy/min. Standard therapeutic doses of 1 Gy/min used in patients with malignant tumors were generated by the therapeutic Co60-based gamma-ray unit Rokus-AM.
To study irradiation effects on a biological model in vitro, 2 cell lines were chosen: MelMtp-x (human melanoma cells from the collection of Blokhin Cancer Research Center, Russia) and A549 (human lung carcinoma 300114 from the Cell Lines Service repository). We assessed the cytotoxic effect of both radiation types by measuring the total number of killed cells, the proportion of apoptotic and necrotic cells, and the number of double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs).

The cells were thawed and cultured following standard protocols. А549 cells were cultured in the DMEM medium (PanEco; Russia). MelMtp-x cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 (Gibco; USA). Both media were supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (S1800; BioWest; France).
Irradiation of the samples on the "Mir-M" and therapeutic gamma-unit "Rokus-AM" were produced by the described methods [8].
The cytofluorometric analysis was performed on the Flow Cytometer Cytomics FC 500 (Beckman Coulter; USA) equipped with an argon ion laser (λ = 488 nm).
The number of double-strand DNA breaks was estimated from the levels of phosphorylated Н2А.Х histone using the 17-344 H2A.X Phosphorylation Assay Kit for Flow Cytometry (Millipore; USA) according to the manufacturer’s protocol.
Cell death pathways in the irradiated samples were studied 24 and 48 hours after irradiation with the help of the Annexin V-FITC Kit (Beckman Coulter; USA). The kit contains annexin V and propidium iodide (PI) and can be used to simultaneously estimate the proportion of both apoptotic and necrotic cells [8]. The significance of differences was assessed by Sudent's t-test. Differences were considered significant at p < 0.1.

RESULTS

The relative number of DSBs did not differ significantly between the А549 (human lung carcinoma) cells irradiated at standard therapeutic dose rates and those exposed to ultrahigh dose rate radiation (fig. 1А). For MelMtp-x cells irradiated with standard therapeutic doses generated by Rokus-AM, the dose-effect relationship was linear, in contrast to MelMtp-x cells exposed to Mir-M pulses that demonstrated a nonlinear relationship (fig. 1B). Photon pulses applied to MelMtp-x cells at doses from 2 to 5 Gy caused a sharp increase in the relative number of DSBs (65.7–80%; p < 0.1). For doses > 7 Gy, the levels of DSBs did not differ significantly between the two studied radiation types, reaching their maximum of 95%.

While analyzing the number of killed cells, we discovered a few different patterns possibly related to the radiation type applied and the specifics of the used cell lines (fig. 2). The 24-h incubation of А549 cells irradiated with therapeutic gamma rays did not result in a significant increase in the number of killed cells; PI-positive cells made up only 6% of the total cells in the culture (fig. 2A). But longer post-irradiation incubation time (48 h) caused a significant increase in the number of killed cells: 32.6% at 8 Gy and 41.2% at 16 Gy. Significant differences were also observed for the number of PI-positive cells between the MelMtp-x cultures irradiated at ultrahigh dose rates and subsequently incubated for 24 h, unirradiated controls and MelMtp-x irradiated with therapeutic gamma rays generated by Rokus-AM (fig. 2B). The proportion of killed cells grew significantly at a dose of 1.4 Gy and higher (14.8%) reaching its maximum at 11.7 Gy (31.2%). At the same time, extended 48-h incubation of the samples irradiated by the Mir-M machine did not cause a significate rise in the number of killed cells. Interestingly, the differences in the proportion of killed cells between the cultures undergoing 48-h incubation and irradiated by different radiation sources were insignificant.

In MelMtp-x cultures irradiated by Rokus-AM the proportion of killed cells was no bigger than 7%; incubation time did not have any effect on cell mortality. Exposure to ultrahigh dose rates followed by 24-h incubation did not produce any significant therapeutic effect. But longer 48-h incubation led to a sharp rise in the proportion of killed cells in the sample: 13.4% at 2.5 Gy and 33.8%. at 11.8 Gy.
The analysis of cell death pathways revealed that the contribution of apoptosis to cell death was the largest (fig. 3). For А549 cells, significant differences in the levels of apoptosis induced by photon radiation as compared to the therapeutic gamma rays generated by Rokus-AM were observed at doses ≥ 1.4 Gy given that the cells were incubated for 24 h (fig. 3A). When incubation time was increased to 48 h, the differences were leveled out. However, the rise in the number of apoptotic A549 cells was significant for both irradiation types: in A549 cells exposed to ultrahigh photon radiation doses of 11.7 Gy the level of apoptosis was 21.4 ± 3.2% after 24 h of incubation and 43.0 ± 5.2% after 48 h of incubation. In the culture exposed to 16 Gy doses generated by Rokus -AM and incubated for 24 h, the proportion of apoptotic cells was 4.8 ± 0.7%; 48-h incubation resulted in the higher level of apoptosis (38.4 ± 4.6%).

The proportion of apoptotic MelMtp-x cells measured after irradiation with standard therapeutic gamma ray doses did not exceed 4%; incubation time did not affect cell mortality in the culture. Exposure to ≥ 5 Gy photon radiation followed by 48-h incubation led to a reliable increase in the proportion of apoptotic cells (fig. 3B).
The proportion of necrotic А549 cells measured after irradiation with photon pulses generated by Mir-M was significant at 4.3 Gy (38.6% of the total killed cells in the culture) and at 11.7 Gy (30.6%) if the cells were incubated for 24 h (fig. 4А). This proportion shrank to 7.1% and 6.1%, respectively, if the cells were incubated for 48 h. This leads to a supposition that in the А549 culture necrotic cells are eliminated within 48 hours while apoptosis induced by ultrahigh photon radiation doses goes on.

While analyzing the level of necrotic cells in the irradiated MelMtp-x culture, we found out that it did not differ significantly between the cells exposed to different radiation sources and incubated for 24 h (fig. 4B). When incubation time was extended to 48 h, the proportion of necrotic cells increased in the samples irradiated by Mir-M with 1.58 Gy. At 2.6 Gy this proportion was 8.9 ± 1.1% making up 66.4% of total cell death; at 11.8 Gy the level of necrosis reached 17.5 ± 2.1% (51.8% of total cell death).

DISCUSSION

Our study demonstrates that cell mortality measured in irradiated А549 (human lung carcinoma) and MelMtp-x (human melanoma) cells is higher for the cells exposed to photon radiation generated by Mir-M, although the number of induced DSBs is comparable between these two cell lines. The proportion of apoptotic cells is significantly higher in the А549 culture irradiated at ultrahigh dose rates.
The number of radiation-induced DSBs characterizes the DNA-damaging capacity of radiation and largely determines the fate of the affected cell [9]. The cell responds to this traumatic event by activating DNA repair pathways; if DNA integrity cannot be restored apoptosis is launched. Problems at any stage of DNA repair lead to chromosomal aberrations and eventually to cell death [10].

The number of DSBs estimated in our experiment is determined by the parameters of the radiation type and the state of DNA repair systems, in the first place. The relationships between the number of DSBs in A549 cells and the radiation type applied turned to be linear and almost identical, meaning that the damage caused by ultrahigh and standard therapeutic dose rates was comparable or that DNA repair mechanisms were intact in this cell line. In А549 cells irradiated at ultrahigh dose rates, apoptosis is induced 24 h after the exposure, whereas therapeutic gamma rays trigger it only 48 h after irradiation. One can assume that damage caused by the energies generated by Rokus-AM does not prevent А549 cells from activating their DNA repair mechanisms, while damage induced by Mir-M ultrahigh dose rates is soon identified by DNA repair mechanisms as irreversible, and apoptosis is triggered as early as 24 h after the exposure. The proportion of apoptotic cells remains high 48 h after irradiation at ultrahigh dose rates but the level of necrosis drops.

The number of DSBs was significantly higher in the MelMtp-x culture irradiated with doses ranging from 2.15 to 7.6 Gy generated by the Mir-M machine. Possibly, at doses starting from ~ 2 Gy the type and extent of DNA damage in the cell prevent DNA repair systems from exerting their function. The results of cell death analysis in MelMtp-x cells are consistent with the reports of melanoma radioresistance [11, 12]; exposure to radiation generated by the therapeutic gamma ray machine Rokus-AM hardly induces cell death, which means that either apoptosis is not activated in response to DSBs [13], or DSB reparation is effective [14]. Cell death was observed in melanoma cells irradiated at ultrahigh dose rates with the same doses (≥ 2.15 Gy) that caused an increase in the number of DSBs. Cell death was induced on day 2 after irradiation. Both apoptosis and necrosis pathways were equally involved. Perhaps, exposure of melanoma cells to ultrahigh dose rates causes their irreversible damage, which in some cases both triggers apoptosis and activates other death pathways. To sum up, we have demonstrated that radiation generated by the experimental Mir-M machine kills significantly more cells than therapeutic gamma rays (Rokus-AM) in both studied cultures: А549 (human lung carcinoma) and MelMtp-x (human melanoma), although the number of induced DSBs is comparable between the cultures at the highest doses applied. In А549 cells irradiated by the Mir-M machine, apoptosis was more extensive.

The use of ultrahigh dose rate radiation holds promise for the treatment of radioresistant cancers and can minimize damage to the surrounding tissues when applied to solid tumors [15, 16].
Our findings may be interesting for clinicians looking for an alternative to conventional radiotherapy and for researchers studying the mechanisms of radioresistance and the ways to overcome it.

CONCLUSIONS

Our findings pave the way for further research of the effect of photon radiation delivered at ultrahigh dose rates on biological objects. This type of radiation may help to improve the efficacy of radiotherapy of radioresistant tumors and mitigate their detrimental effect on the surrounding healthy tissue.

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