Scientific Reports (Jun 2022)

Intercomparison of radiosensitization induced by gold and iron oxide nanoparticles in human glioblastoma cells irradiated by 6 MV photons

  • Danieli B. Guerra,
  • Elisa M. N. Oliveira,
  • Amanda R. Sonntag,
  • Patricia Sbaraine,
  • Andre P. Fay,
  • Fernanda B. Morrone,
  • Ricardo M. Papaléo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-13368-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract In this work, an intercomparison of sensitization effects produced by gold (GNP) and dextran-coated iron oxide (SPION-DX) nanoparticles in M059J and U87 human glioblastoma cells was performed using 6 MV-photons. Three variables were mapped: the nanoparticle material, treatment concentration, and cell radiosensitivity. For U87, GNP treatments resulted in high sensitization enhancement ratios (SER $$_{10\%}$$ 10 % up to 2.04). More modest effects were induced by SPION-DX, but still significant reductions in survival were achieved (maximum SER $$_{10\%}=1.61$$ 10 % = 1.61 ). For the radiosensitive M059J, sensitization by both NPs was poor. SER $$_{10\%}$$ 10 % increased with the degree of elemental uptake in the cells, but not necessarily with treatment concentration. For GNP, where exposure concentration and elemental uptake were found to be proportional, SER $$_{10\%}$$ 10 % increased linearly with concentration in both cell lines. For SPION-DX, saturation of sensitization enhancement and metal uptake occurred at high exposures. Fold change in the $$\alpha /\beta$$ α / β ratios extracted from survival curves are reduced by the presence of SPION-DX but strongly increased by GNPs , suggesting that sensitization by GNPs occurs mainly via promotion of lethal damage, while for SPION-DX repairable damage dominates. The NPs were more effective in eliminating the radioresistant glioblastoma cells, an interesting finding, as resistant cells are key targets to improve treatment outcome.