Vibrational spectroscopy in sensing radiobiological effects: analyses of targeted and non-targeted effects in human keratinocytes

Author:

Meade Aidan D.12345ORCID,Howe Orla56234,Unterreiner Valérie78910,Sockalingum Ganesh D.81112910,Byrne Hugh J.6234,Lyng Fiona M.12345

Affiliation:

1. School of Physics

2. Dublin Institute of Technology

3. Dublin 8

4. Ireland

5. DIT Centre for Radiation and Environmental Science

6. Focas Research Institute

7. Plateforme en Imagerie Cellulaire et Tissulaire (PICT)

8. Université de Reims Champagne-Ardenne

9. 51095 Reims Cedex

10. France

11. MéDIAN-Biophotonique et Technologies pour la Santé

12. UFR de Pharmacie

Abstract

Modern models of radiobiological effects include mechanisms of damage initiation, sensing and repair, for those cells that directly absorb ionizing radiation as well as those that experience molecular signals from directly irradiated cells. In the former case, the effects are termed targeted effects while, in the latter, non-targeted effects. It has emerged that phenomena occur at low doses below 1 Gy in directly irradiated cells that are associated with cell-cycle-dependent mechanisms of DNA damage sensing and repair. Likewise in non-targeted bystander-irradiated cells the effect saturates at 0.5 Gy. Both effects at these doses challenge the limits of detection of vibrational spectroscopy. In this paper, a study of the sensing of both targeted and non-targeted effects in HaCaT human keratinocytes irradiated with gamma ray photons is conducted with vibrational spectroscopy. In the case of directly irradiated cells, it is shown that the HaCaT cell line does exhibit both hyperradiosensitivity and increased radioresistance at low doses, a transition between the two effects occurring at a dose of 200 mGy, and that cell survival and other physiological effects as a function of dose follow the induced repair model. Both Raman and FTIR signatures are shown to follow a similar model, suggesting that the spectra include signatures of DNA damage sensing and repair. In bystander-irradiated cells, pro- and anti-apoptotic signalling and mechanisms of ROS damage were inhibited in the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) transduction pathway. It is shown that Raman spectral profiles of bystander-irradiated cells are correlated with markers of bystander signalling and molecular transduction. This work demonstrates for the first time that both targeted and non-targeted effects of ionizing radiation damage are detected by vibrational spectroscopy in vitro.

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

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