A Raman Spectroscopic Study of Cell Response to Clinical Doses of Ionizing Radiation

Author:

Harder Samantha J.,Matthews Quinn1,Isabelle Martin2,Brolo Alexandre G.3,Lum Julian J.45,Jirasek Andrew26

Affiliation:

1. BC Cancer Agency—Vancouver Island Centre, Medical Physics, 2410 Lee Avenue, Victoria, British Columbia V8R 6V5, Canada

2. University of Victoria, Department of Physics and Astronomy, PO Box 1700 STN CSC, Victoria, British Columbia V8W 2Y2, Canada

3. University of Victoria, Department of Chemistry, PO Box 3065, Victoria, BC V8W 3V6, Canada

4. BC Cancer Agency—Vancouver Island Centre, Trev and Joyce Deeley Research Centre, 2410 Lee Ave., Victoria, British Columbia V8R 6V5, Canada

5. University of Victoria, Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, PO Box 1700 STN CSC, Victoria, British Columbia, V8W 2Y2, Canada

6. The University of British Columbia, Physics, Okanagan Campus, 3333 University Way, Kelowna, British Columbia V1V 1V7, Canada

Abstract

The drive toward personalized radiation therapy (RT) has created significant interest in determining patient-specific tumor and normal tissue responses to radiation. Raman spectroscopy (RS) is a non-invasive and label-free technique that can detect radiation response through assessment of radiation-induced biochemical changes in tumor cells. In the current study, single-cell RS identified specific radiation-induced responses in four human epithelial tumor cell lines: lung (H460), breast (MCF-7, MDA-MB-231), and prostate (LNCaP), following exposure to clinical doses of radiation (2–10 Gy). At low radiation doses (2 Gy), H460 and MCF-7 cell lines showed an increase in glycogen-related spectral features, and the LNCaP cell line showed a membrane phospholipid-related radiation response. In these cell lines, only spectral information from populations receiving 10 Gy or less was required to identify radiation-related features using principal component analysis (PCA). In contrast, the MDA-MB-231 cell line showed a significant increase in protein relative to nucleic acid and lipid spectral features at doses of 6 Gy or higher, and high-dose information (30, 50 Gy) was required for PCA to identify this biological response. The biochemical nature of the radiation-related changes occurring in cells exposed to clinical doses was found to segregate by status of p53 and radiation sensitivity. Furthermore, the utility of RS to identify a biological response in human tumor cells exposed to therapeutic doses of radiation was found to be governed by the extent of the biochemical changes induced by a radiation response and is therefore cell line specific. The results of this study demonstrate the utility and effectiveness of single-cell RS to identify and measure biological responses in tumor cells exposed to standard radiotherapy doses.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Spectroscopy,Instrumentation

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