scholarly journals Performance Evaluation for Repair of HSGc-C5 Carcinoma Cell Using Geant4-DNA

Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (23) ◽  
pp. 6046
Author(s):  
Dousatsu Sakata ◽  
Masao Suzuki ◽  
Ryoichi Hirayama ◽  
Yasushi Abe ◽  
Masayuki Muramatsu ◽  
...  

Track-structure Monte Carlo simulations are useful tools to evaluate initial DNA damage induced by irradiation. In the previous study, we have developed a Gean4-DNA-based application to estimate the cell surviving fraction of V79 cells after irradiation, bridging the gap between the initial DNA damage and the DNA rejoining kinetics by means of the two-lesion kinetics (TLK) model. However, since the DNA repair performance depends on cell line, the same model parameters cannot be used for different cell lines. Thus, we extended the Geant4-DNA application with a TLK model for the evaluation of DNA damage repair performance in HSGc-C5 carcinoma cells which are typically used for evaluating proton/carbon radiation treatment effects. For this evaluation, we also performed experimental measurements for cell surviving fractions and DNA rejoining kinetics of the HSGc-C5 cells irradiated by 70 MeV protons at the cyclotron facility at the National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology (QST). Concerning fast- and slow-DNA rejoining, the TLK model parameters were adequately optimized with the simulated initial DNA damage. The optimized DNA rejoining speeds were reasonably agreed with the experimental DNA rejoining speeds. Using the optimized TLK model, the Geant4-DNA simulation is now able to predict cell survival and DNA-rejoining kinetics for HSGc-C5 cells.

Author(s):  
Dousatsu Sakata ◽  
Masao Suzuki ◽  
Ryoichi Hirayama ◽  
Yasushi Abe ◽  
Masayuki Muramatsu ◽  
...  

Track-structure Monte Carlo simulations are useful tools to evaluate initial DNA damage induced by irradiation. In the previous study, we have developed a Gean4-DNA-based application to estimate the cell surviving fraction of V79 cells after irradiation, bridging the gap between the initial DNA damage and the DNA-rejoining kinetics by means of the two-lesion kinetics (TLK) model. However, since the DNA repair performance depends on cell line, the same model parameters cannot be used for the different cell lines. Thus, we extended the Geant4-DNA application with an updated TLK model for the evaluation of DNA damage repair performance in HSGc-C5 carcinoma cells which are typically used for evaluating proton/carbon radiation treatment effects. For this evaluation, we also performed experimental measurements for cell surviving fractions and DNA-rejoining kinetics of the HSGc-C5s cells. Concerning fast- and slow-DNA rejoining, the TLK model parameters were adequately optimized with the simulated initial DNA damage. Using the optimized TLK model, the Geant4-DNA simulation is now able to predict cell survival and DNA-rejoining kinetics for HSGc-C5s cells.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena K. Zaharieva ◽  
Megumi Sasatani ◽  
Kenji Kamiya

We present time and dose dependencies for the formation of 53BP1 and γH2AX DNA damage repair foci after chronic radiation exposure at dose rates of 140, 250 and 450 mGy/day from 3 to 96 h, in human and mouse repair proficient and ATM or DNA-PK deficient repair compromised cell models. We describe the time/dose-response curves using a mathematical equation which contains a linear component for the induction of DNA damage repair foci after irradiation, and an exponential component for their resolution. We show that under conditions of chronic irradiation at low and medium dose rates, the processes of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) induction and repair establish an equilibrium, which in repair proficient cells manifests as a plateau-shaped dose-response where the plateau is reached within the first 24 h postirradiation, and its height is proportionate to the radiation dose rate. In contrast, in repair compromised cells, where the rate of repair may be exceeded by the DSB induction rate, DNA damage accumulates with time of exposure and total absorbed dose. In addition, we discuss the biological meaning of the observed dependencies by presenting the frequency of micronuclei formation under the same irradiation conditions as a marker of radiation-induced genomic instability. We believe that the data and analysis presented here shed light on the kinetics of DNA repair under chronic radiation and are useful for future studies in the low-to-medium dose rate range.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Moshe Giladi ◽  
Mijal Munster ◽  
Rosa S. Schneiderman ◽  
Tali Voloshin ◽  
Yaara Porat ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol Volume 12 ◽  
pp. 11107-11117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xianhe Xie ◽  
Weili Zheng ◽  
Ting Chen ◽  
Wanzun Lin ◽  
Ziyuan Liao ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2812-2812
Author(s):  
Clare Crean ◽  
Kienan I Savage ◽  
Ken I Mills

Abstract Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) is most commonly seen in people over the age of 65 and has a median age of 63. Globally there is an increasingly elderly population so the rate of incidence of AML is set to increase. The therapy landscape for AML has changed little over the past four decades. Cytarabine, first approved in 1969, is still the standard of care induction therapy for AML. There has been only modest improvements in survival rates during this time and there is currently no method of determining which patients will or will not respond to Cytarabine treatment. An assay, developed in 2014, used microarray data to determine which breast cancer patients had a DNA Damage Repair Deficiency (DDRD) and therefore would be more susceptible to DNA damaging agents. A negative DDRD (DDRD-) score predicts that patients do not to have a DNA Repair Deficiency whilst patients with a positive DDRD (DDRD+) score are predicted to have a DNA Repair Deficiency. This assay has been adapted to different solid cancer types such as ovarian and oesophageal cancer. This project has assessed the potential of using the DDRD assay for AML patients. The assay was applied to publically available microarray data of >600 AML patients (TCGA AML data &GSE6891), who were classed as DDRD- or DDRD+. Excluding patients not treated with Cytarabine, this left 639 patients, 405 DDRD+ and 234 DDRD-. Kaplan Meier analysis showed the DDRD+ patients survived significantly (p=0.00047) worse than the DDRD- cohort. Whole exome sequencing was available for 183 patients (131 DDRD+) and the mutations associated with each group were identified. As the DDRD+ patients had the worst outcome, we focused on group. The list of genes more commonly mutated in the DDRD+ patients (>2 instances and >50% occurring in this group) were subjected to pathway analysis. Deregulated pathways included "leukemogenisis" and "cell proliferation and regulation"; however, the most deregulated pathway was "metabolism of nucleobase containing compounds". As Cytarabine is a nucleobase-containing compound, this is potentially a contributing factor as to why these patients responded poorly to this treatment. The assay was applied to microarray data of a panel of myeloid cell lines, and DDRD-(NB4 & SKM1) and a DDRD+(HL-60) cell line were chosen as experimental models. Clonogenic assays, used to analyse the effect of Cytarabine on these cell lines, showed that the DDRD- cell lines were more sensitive with a lower colony growth rate than the DDRD+cell line. DNA damage induction and repair, following cytarabine treatment or 2gy radiation, were measured using RAD51 foci counts. Whilst foci counts were high in all cell lines 2hrs and 4hrs following radiation, the DDRD+ cell line continued to show high levels after 24hrs whereas the levels in the DDRD- cell lines returned to a basal level. RAD51 response to radiation treatment showed that a repair defect is present in DDRD+ cells as they fail to repair the damage induced by radiation. Following treatment with Cytarabine however, few foci were seen in the DDRD+ cell line 2hrs, 4hrs or 24hrs following treatment whereas the DDRD- cell lines responded in a similar fashion to radiation treatment. That RAD51 foci are not present following Cytarabine treatment indicates that Cytarabine fails to induce damage in these cells. The DDRD assay has shown to be an effective method for determining cellular response to Cytarabine in vivo. The non-response of the DDRD+ cell line to Cytarabine suggests that these cells do not elicit a DNA damage or an apoptotic response. This perhaps contributes to their poorer outcome and suggests that Cytarabine is not an effective treatment plan for patients deemed to be DDRD+. Although alternative induction treatment options are currently unavailable for DDRD+ AML patients, this DDRD assay could be used as a biomarker for Cytarabine response in the future. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi2-vi2
Author(s):  
Aram Modrek ◽  
David Byun ◽  
Ravesanker Ezhilarasan ◽  
Matija Snuderl ◽  
Erik Sulman

Abstract PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE(S) In glioblastoma, DNA methylation states are the most predictive marker of overall survival and response to therapy. Our understanding of how epigenetic states, such as DNA methylation, are “mis-repaired” after DNA damage repair is scant, hampering our ability to understand how treatment associated DNA methylation alterations may drive tumor resistance and growth. MATERIALS AND METHODS Three different patient derived IDH wild-type glioma stem cell (GSC) lines, in duplicates, were treated with radiation (20 Gray in 10 fractions vs. sham control) and allowed to recover prior to DNA methylation analysis with 850K methylation arrays. To analyze the methylation array data via bioinformatic methods we used RnBeads (version 2.4.0) and R (version 3.6.1) packages. We further focused our analysis to specific genomic regions, including CpG islands, promoters, gene bodies and CTCF motifs to understand how methylation alterations may differ between these and other genomic contexts following radiation. RESULTS There were widespread differential methylation (pre-treatment vs. radiation treatment) changes among the genomic regions examined. Interestingly, we found differential methylation changes at CTCF motifs, which play important DNA-methylation dependent roles in gene expression and chromatin architecture regulation. Hierarchical clustering, PCA and MDS analysis of DNA methylation status amongst CpG islands, promoters, gene bodies and CTCF domains revealed strong intra-sample differences, but not inter-sample differences (between GSC lines), suggesting radiation associated methylation alterations maybe loci and context dependent. CONCLUSION Radiation treatment is associated with wide-spread alterations of DNA methylation states in this patient derived glioblastoma model. Such alterations may drive gene expression changes or genomic architecture alterations that lead to treatment resistance, warranting further mechanistic investigation of the interplay between radiation induced DNA damage and local epigenetic state restoration following DNA damage repair.


2008 ◽  
Vol 294 (4) ◽  
pp. C907-C916 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina S. Alves ◽  
Monica M. Burdick ◽  
Susan N. Thomas ◽  
Parag Pawar ◽  
Konstantinos Konstantopoulos

Selectins and fibrin(ogen) play key roles in the hematogenous dissemination of tumor cells, and especially of colon carcinomas. However, the fibrin(ogen) receptor(s) on colon carcinoma cells has yet to be defined along with its relative capacity to bind fibrinogen versus fibrin under flow. Moreover, the functional P-selectin ligand has yet to be validated using intact platelets rather than purified selectin substrates. Using human CD44-knockdown and control LS174T cells, we demonstrate the pivotal involvement of CD44 in the P-selectin-mediated binding to platelets in shear flow. Quantitative comparisons of the binding kinetics of LS174T versus P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1)-expressing THP-1 cells to activated platelets reveal that the relative avidity of P-selectin-CD44 binding is more than sevenfold lower than that of P-selectin-PSGL-1 interaction. Using CD44-knockdown LS174T cells and microspheres coated with CD44 immunoprecipitated from control LS174T cells, and purified fibrin(ogen) as substrate, we provide the first direct evidence that CD44 also acts as the major fibrin, but not fibrinogen, receptor on LS174T colon carcinoma cells. Interestingly, binding of plasma fibrin to CD44 on the colon carcinoma cell surface interferes with the P-selectin-CD44 molecular interaction and diminishes platelet-LS174T heteroaggregation in the high shear regime. Cumulatively, our data offer a novel perspective on the apparent metastatic potential associated with CD44 overexpression on colon carcinoma cells and the critical roles of P-selectin and fibrin(ogen) in metastatic spread and provide a rational basis for the design of new therapeutic strategies to impede metastasis.


2014 ◽  
Vol 32 (6) ◽  
pp. 2596-2604 ◽  
Author(s):  
HAIWEN LI ◽  
XINGGUI CHEN ◽  
YING YU ◽  
ZHENNAN WANG ◽  
YUFANG ZUO ◽  
...  

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