2Department of Bio-Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Kırıkkale University, Kırıkkale-Turkey DOI : 10.5505/tjo.2019.911
Summary
OBJECTIVERadiotherapy is an essential part of cancer management, and about two-thirds of the patients with cancer receive radiation therapy during their treatment. The healthy structures around the tumor are dose limiting in terms of acute and late toxicity. Radiosensitizers (RSs) can be used to enhance intratumoral dose, thus improving the therapeutic ratio. We aimed to investigate the cytotoxicity on normal and cancer cell lines induced by interaction between MV photon irradiation and polyethyleneimine (PEI)- coated gold nanoparticles (AuNPs).
METHODS
The effects of different concentrations of AuNPs (0.75 ?g/ml, 0.5 ?g/ml, 0.25 ?g/ml, and only medium)
and 2 Gy ionizing radiation (IR) were investigated on the L929 fibroblast, DLD-1 colon, and H1299 lung
cancer cell lines. Cytoplasmic and nuclear membranes treated with hematoxylin and eosin and double
staining were evaluated with light and fluorescence microscopy. Cytotoxicity was determined with the
WST-1 method.
RESULTS
All particles were spherical in shape with 60.98 nm in size. Cell surviving ratios without AuNPs were
96.34% in L929, 89.68% in DLD-1, and 76.93% in H1299 for a single 2-Gy radiation. These ratios were
94.2%, 62.58%, and 40.52% for L929 cells; 72.70%, 41.15%, and 26.71% for DLD-1 cells; and 34.72%,
28.27%, and 17.84% for H1299 cells at concentrations of 0.25 ?g/ml, 0.5 ?g/ml, and 0.75 ?g/ml AuNPs,
respectively.
CONCLUSION
At increased concentrations, isolated unwanted cytotoxic effects of AuNPs could be observed. Radiosensitizing
effect of PEI-coated AuNPs depends on cell type and AuNP concentration.
Introduction
Radiotherapy is an essential part of cancer management, and about 50%?60% of the patients with cancer receive radiotherapy during the treatment of their illness.[1] The healthy structures around the tumor are dose limiting in terms of acute and late toxicity. Using more precise radiation techniques such as intensity-modulated radiotherapy and applying concurrent chemotherapy and/or hyperthermia as a radiosensitizer (RS) are examples for enhancing intratumoral dose, and they thus improve the therapeutic ratio.[2,3,4]Nanotechnology is a rapidly developing branch of science. Its use in radiation oncology has three major aspects: 1) facilitate image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) through mechanisms based on increased uptake of particles by cancer cells similar to positron emission tomography imaging [5]; 2) increased synergistic cytotoxic effects with hyperthermia, chemotherapy, and targeted therapy combinations [6,7,8,9]; and 3) radiation enhancement via radiosensitizing effect.[10]
Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are usually various shaped with a size of 1?100 nm and a gold core covered by surface coating.[11] Among the elements with high Z number, AuNPs are the most extensively studied ones because of their relative biocompatibilityand ease in size, shape, and surface coating modifications.[4] They are small enough to pass through atypical weakly tumor vasculature so that they can extravagate and accumulate in tumor site much more easily than they do in normal tissues. This is called enhanced permeability and retention effect, and is a key characteristic of AuNPs to introduce into clinical practice. In the bloodstream, they must have sufficient circulating time without interference to the biologic effects that they are exposed to. Upon extravasation from tumor vasculature, they penetrate to the tumor interstitium and distribute homogeneously. Smaller AuNPs are advantageous in achieving more homogeneous intratumoral distribution. Uptake of cells via receptor-mediated endocytosis is dependent on size and shape, and it requires energy.[12] It is known that IR can directly or indirectly damage DNA, and has no selectivity because of the similar mass energy absorption of cancerous and healthy tissues. [13] While cytoplasmic localization of particles can yield radiosensitization, nuclear uptake enables additional DNA damage by low-energy electrons.[14,15] Yet, they must be smaller than 30 nm to allow uptake through the nuclear pore complex. Like most of the drugs, AuNPs are eliminated through kidney (?7 nm) and liver (~10?100 nm). Dedicated particles should be easily excreted by the kidneys with reduced opsonization and clearance by Kupffer cells.[16,17,18]
Over the past decade, the field of AuNP-based radiosensitization has undergone a tremendous growth; this fact is demonstrated by the exponential increase in the number of publications on this topic. Studies regarding AuNP-mediated radiation enhancement have been done from the early 2000s.[19,20] Most of these studies showed RS effect at superficial kV and less with clinically relevant MV energy levels.[21,22,23] Although there is an ongoing huge preclinical data describing the possible mechanisms behind this radiation enhancement, it is still in infancy. Interaction with matter causes a series of reactions in three phases: physical, chemical, and biological; and recent data show that AuNPs have roles in all these phases of interactions with IR.[4,24,25] It would be plausible to predict that this enhancement can be affected by the modifications of IR parameters (source, energy, dose/ fraction); AuNPs (size, shape, surface coating, and functionalization); and the tumor itself such as intrinsic sensitivity, hypoxic fraction, and so on. From bench to bedside use of AuNP as an RS, the optimal concentrations of AuNPs for different types of tumors should be thoroughly examined.[10]
This study aimed to characterize the cytotoxicity on normal fibroblasts (L929), colon (DLD-1), and lung (H1299) cancer cell lines via AuNP-mediated radiation dose enhancement under MV energies.
Methods
Cell CultureColon (DLD-1) and lung (H-1299) cancer cells were obtained from American Type Culture Collection. All cultures were supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 1% penicillin and streptomycin. Cell lines were maintained in monolayers in a tissue culture humified incubator at 37°C with 5% CO2/95% air for 24 h and sub-cultured every 3?4 days to maintain exponential growth.
AuNP Synthesis
AuNPs coated with polyethyleneimine (PEI) and
3-aminophenyl boronic acid, which were previously
synthesized for another study, were used in our work.
[26] AuNPs were added and provided the same concentration
of gold nanoparticles in the culture during
irradiation.
Irradiation Setup
Megavoltage X-ray (6 MV) irradiations were performed
using the Elekta linear accelerator. Petri dishes
contain a layer of malignant cells plus about 2 mm of
medium and 18 mm air. The prescribed dose was 2 Gy,
and SSD was set to 100 cm using a 20×20 cm field. Six
centimeters of plexyglass material (water-equivalent)
was placed on top of the dish. The dose rate was 3.55
Gy/min.
The gafchromic film was placed under the dishes to evaluate dose homogeneity and to irradiate with a single dose of 2 Gy. After radiation exposure, the dosimetry film demonstrated that the target area was homogeneously exposed to radiation.
Hematoxylin-Eosin Staining
A 20×103 cells/well of L929, DLD-1, and H1299 cells
were placed in a 48-well plate of 10% fetal bovine serum
and 1% penicillin streptomycin containing DMEM and
RPMI and incubated with 5% CO2 at 37°C for 24 h.
Afterwards, cells were treated with different amounts
of AuNPs (0.25 ?g/ml, 0.5 ?g/ml, 0.75 ?g/ml) and incubated
another 24 h and then 2 Gy RT was applied.
Alcohol was put into cells in decreasing concentrations
(100%, 96%, 80%, 70%, 50%) for 1 min for dehydration.
Cell morphology was examined under the light
microscope. Experiments were repeated thrice.
Double Staining
Double staining was performed to quantify the number
of apoptotic and necrotic cells. The L929, DLD-1,
and H1299 cells were placed in 10 ml of PBS solution
in a 48-well plate (20×103 cells/well). Ribonuclease A
inhibits cytoplasmic RNA staining, and propodium
iodide stains necrotic and Hoescht 33342 stains apoptotic
cells. Cells were subjected to RPMI and DMEM
and incubated with 5% CO2 at 37°C for 24 h. Then
three different concentrations (0.75 ?g/ml, 0.5 ?g/ml,
0.25 ?g/ml) of AuNPs were added and incubated for
another 24-h repeated thrice. Afterwards, they were
washed with PBS (after the incubation, the cells media
were discarded) and stained with 70 ?l double staining
dye for 15 min at dark. Cells were examined with
FITC- and DAPI-filtered fluorescent inverted microscope.
A 20-fold magnification was used for images.
WST-1 Cytotoxicity Test
Initially cells were plated for 24 h, and then treated
with 0.25 ?g/ml, 0.50 ?g/ml, and 0.75 ?g/ml 60.98 nm
AuNPs for 24 h. Then cells were washed; and cell media
was discarded and incubated in fresh culture medium
without 100 ?l phenol red. The cells were then exposed
to 10 ?l WST-1 solution for 4 h, and plates were read
using a microplate reader at 440 nm. The cell numbers
in the control and AuNP-exposed samples were
counted; thus, toxicity of different concentration of
AuNPs was analyzed.
Following incubation, the absorbance was measured in a microplate reader at a wavelength of 440 nm to determine the toxicity of the gold particles alone.
In the second phase of the experiment, after 24 h exposure with AuNPs, cells were irradiated with 2 Gy photon beams. After irradiation, AuNP-exposed and unexposed cells (control) were incubated in culture medium for another 24 h, and then viability was tested for the IR and IR+AuNP groups.
Radiation Enhancement Ratio
The radiation enhancement ratio (RER) is defined as
the ratio of survival fractions without and with AuNPs
for a specific dose that is 2 Gy in this setting. It has
the benefit of directly comparing the biologic response
caused by the nanoparticles at a specific dose level.
Results
Morphologic Assessment of Cells (H&E staining)Cells were examined under a light microscope after AuNP and AuNP+IR exposure, and results were presented in Figures 1, 2, 3 and Table 1. Without any exposure, all three types of cells were morphologically normal with a clear cytoplasm-nucleus boundary and placed dispersedly in the medium. After PEI-coated AuNPs exposure, cells morphology was changed according to the amount of AuNPs used.
Table 1: H&E staining results of damaged cell (%)
Cells were aggregated, lost their cytoplasmic membrane integrity, decreased in volume, and detached from the plate. These changes were most abundant in H1299 cells and least in fibroblasts and exacerbated with IR. Cross-linking between positively charged AuNPs with glycosaminoglycan and collagens caused intercellular organic material accumulation leading to cytoplasmic membrane damage. This may result in decreased uptake of nutrients in cancer cells and thus cell death.
Double Staining of Nucleus
The PI-stained necrotic cell ratios and microscopic images
are presented in Table 2 and Figures 1, 2, 3. The
ratio of necrotic cells with PI-stained nucleus was 1%-4%, and it increased with increasing AuNP concentrations.
The nucleus was mostly intact except H1299 cells
with 0.50 and 0.75 ?g/ml AuNPs.
Table 2: PI staining results of necrotic cells (%)
Viability
Cell surviving ratios without AuNPs were 96.34% in L
929 (Fig. 1), 89.68% in DLD-1 (Fig. 2), and 76.93% in
H1299 (Fig. 3) for a single 2-Gy radiation. These ratios
were 94.2%, 62.58%, and 40.52% for L929 cells;
84.85%, 78.05%, and 17.84% for DLD-1 cells; 34.72%,
28.27%, and 17.84% for H1299 cells at concentrations
of 0.25 ?g/ml, 0.5 ?g/ml, 0.75 ?g/ml AuNPs, respectively.
Viability of cells after IR exposure with and without
AuNPs is represented in Tables 3 and 4.
Table 3: Cell viability ratios with and without AuNP (±SD)
Table 4: Cell viability ratios with and without AuNPs after 2 Gy radiation exposure (±SD)
Radiation Enhancement Ratio
Radiation enhancement ratio (RER2Gy) for DLD-1
was 1.23 and for H1299 was 2.21 with 0.25 ?g/ml concentrations
of AuNPs.
Discussion
Gold has long been used in the therapeutic and diagnostic medicine because it is considered as an inert, nontoxic, biocompatible metal. It has been widely studied in current medical and biological research in nanoscale level, and many researches have been done to investigate the possible role of them in the clinical setting.[10,27,28] Naked AuNPs are significantly toxic both in vitro and in vivo, and appropriate coating may lessen these detrimental effects. Surface chemistry is also an important key parameter.[9] Highly positive NPs bind to negatively charged DNA causing damage to it. Amine groups also enable specific targeting of cells, for example, drugs.[29,30]In this study, we used 60.98 nm spherical AuNPs coated with cationic charged PEI and 0.25 ?g/ml AuNPs concentration considered to be safe so that at least 69% viability observed cancerous cell lines and fibroblast continued to proliferate. The toxic effect due to AuNPs showed a significant difference between normal and cancerous cells at low concentrations, but this difference gradually diminished with increasing concentrations. The level of toxicity was also different for different tumor types; H1299 appears to be the most vulnerable group. In a study by Coulter et al., they found that AuNP uptake was preferentially observed in tumor cells, and cytotoxicity was low, so that particle concentration causing 50% of growth inhibition in cell culture defined as IC50 for normal cells were 14 times higher than tumor cells.[13] They also showed that intracellular accumulation of gold occurs in concentration and time-dependent manner. Toxic effects of nanoparticles seen more frequently on tumor cells suggest the enhanced permeation and retention effect in vivo described by Maeda et al.[31]
Formerly, radiosensitization has mainly been attributed to physical dose enhancement occurring at kilovoltage (kV) photon energies by means of photoelectric absorption of gold as a high Z material. However, data about different mechanisms of radiobiological effects regarding radiosensitization are growing [4], and experimental studies using clinically relevant MV energies showed significant dose enhancements in vitro and in vivo suggesting other possible mechanisms of biological action, for example, oxidative stress, cell cycle distribution, and DNA repair inhibition rather than physical enhancement.[32] With the same concentration, we studied the radiation enhancement effect difference in different cancer cells. In this study, 0.25 ?g/ ml dose concentration of nanoparticle was found to be safer, and an RER of 1.23 and 2.21 were found for DLD-1 and H1299 cells, respectively. Our observation was consistent with the results of previous studies that radiation sensitization may change with different cell types. In addition, Her et al. evaluated the radiosensitization effects of polyethylene glycol-stabilized AuNPs (PEG-AuNPs) in two human triple-negative cell lines (MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB- 436), and they found that PEG-AuNPs sensitized both cell lines to radiation, achieving dose enhancement factors of 1.26 and 1.15, respectively.[33]
The surface coating is an important parameter to control particle stability solubility and biocompatibility.[34,35] It also enables targeting of antibodies, drugs, and radionuclides. Citrate, polyethylene glycol, and thiol are frequently used coatings. They also led to necrosis by enhanced ROS production. PEI, which is used as a coating in this study, is a cationic polymer that binds to the anionic cell membrane phospholipids and enables uptake.[36] It can be used as a gene delivery vehicle [37], a contrast agent for imaging [38,39], and a biosensor for glutamate detection.[40]
Chithrani et al. evaluated the size and shape dependence of AuNPs" uptake into mammalian cells, and observed the highest uptake and radiosensitization with approximately 50 nm compared to the 14 nm and 70 nm.[41] They were also the first who observed relatively decreased but still significant radiosensitization at MV energies.[42] They showed that HeLa cells treated with 50 nm citrate-AuNPs increased the number of ?-H2AX and 53BP1 foci at 4 and 24 h post-irradiation at both 220 kVp and 6 MV energies that were indicative of delayed DNA repair, a key mode of radiosensitization.
Wang et al. reported the radiosensitization effect of glucose-capped AuNPs with different sizes (16 nm and 49 nm) on triple-negative breast cancer cells in the presence of MV energy. They showed increased RS effect with 49 nm AuNPs with an SER of 1.86 compared to 16 nm AuNPs with an SER of 1.49. Moreover, they demonstrated that the rate of the cells arrested in G2/M phase were increased with AuNPs" exposure, more with 49 nm AuNPs, a possible mechanism for enhanced radiation sensitization effect because G2/M phase is the most radiosensitive phase of the cell cycle. [43] We found an RER of 1.23 and 2.21 for colon and lung cancer cells with similar size but different coating AuNPs. Not only particle size but shape, surface coating, concentration, and cell type may change radiation enhancement. To date, because different approaches, for example, SER, DMRX%, REF is used to quantify NP radiation enhancement effect; it is challenging to interpret the results even with identical nanoparticles and cell type.
There are certain limitations of the study. First, although staining of cells showed us cell membrane, cytoplasm, and nuclear damage, we were not able to determine the intracellular distribution of AuNPs, in terms of uptake and localization that can affect both the isolated toxicity of AuNPs and radio sensitization. Defining the underlying mechanism for RS effect is also critical for possible further clinical application.
AuNP-related cytotoxicity was observed not only in cancerous cells but also in noncancerous fibroblasts. This toxic effect is more pronounced at increasing concentrations that can limit the use of AuNP. This study also suggests that lower concentration of AuNPs acting only on cancer cells can be used as RSs and are celltype dependent.
Peer-review: Externally peer-reviewed.
Conflict of Interest: No conflict of interest.
Financial Support: No financial support.
Authorship contributions: Concept - S.A.A., M.T.; Design
- S.A.A., M.T.; Supervision - S.A.A., M.T.; Materials -
S.A.A., M.T.; Data collection &/or processing ? S.A.A., M.T.;
Analysis and/or interpretation - S.A.A., M.T.; Literature
search - S.A.A.; Writing - S.A.A.; Critical review - S.A.A.
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