1. Boron Nanoparticle-Enhanced Proton Therapy: Molecular Mechanisms of Tumor Cell Sensitization.
- Author
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Popov AL, Kolmanovich DD, Chukavin NN, Zelepukin IV, Tikhonowski GV, Pastukhov AI, Popov AA, Shemyakov AE, Klimentov SM, Ryabov VA, Deyev SM, Zavestovskaya IN, and Kabashin AV
- Subjects
- Humans, Cell Line, Tumor, Neoplasms radiotherapy, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms metabolism, Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial drug effects, Radiation-Sensitizing Agents pharmacology, Radiation-Sensitizing Agents chemistry, Mitochondria drug effects, Mitochondria metabolism, Mitochondria radiation effects, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Proton Therapy, Boron chemistry, Boron pharmacology, Nanoparticles chemistry, Apoptosis drug effects, Apoptosis radiation effects
- Abstract
Boron-enhanced proton therapy has recently appeared as a promising approach to increase the efficiency of proton therapy on tumor cells, and this modality can further be improved by the use of boron nanoparticles (B NPs) as local sensitizers to achieve enhanced and targeted therapeutic outcomes. However, the mechanisms of tumor cell elimination under boron-enhanced proton therapy still require clarification. Here, we explore possible molecular mechanisms responsible for the enhancement of therapeutic outcomes under boron NP-enhanced proton therapy. Spherical B NPs with a mode size of 25 nm were prepared by methods of pulsed laser ablation in water, followed by their coating by polyethylene glycol to improve their colloidal stability in buffers. Then, we assessed the efficiency of B NPs as sensitizers of cancer cell killing under irradiation with a 160.5 MeV proton beam. Our experiments showed that the combined effect of B NPs and proton irradiation induces an increased level of superoxide anion radical generation, which leads to the depolarization of mitochondria, a drop in their membrane mitochondrial potential, and the development of apoptosis. A comprehensive gene expression analysis (via RT-PCR) confirmed increased overexpression of 52 genes (out of 87 studied) involved in the cell redox status and oxidative stress, compared to 12 genes in the cells irradiated without B NPs. Other possible mechanisms responsible for the B NPs-induced radiosensitizing effect, including one related to the generation of alpha particles, are discussed. The obtained results give a better insight into the processes involved in the boron-induced enhancement of proton therapy and enable one to optimize parameters of proton therapy in order to maximize therapeutic outcomes.
- Published
- 2024
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