International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2021)

The Use of ProteoTuner Technology to Study Nuclear Factor κB Activation by Heavy Ions

  • Arif Ali Chishti,
  • Christa Baumstark-Khan,
  • Hasan Nisar,
  • Yueyuan Hu,
  • Bikash Konda,
  • Bernd Henschenmacher,
  • Luis F. Spitta,
  • Claudia Schmitz,
  • Sebastian Feles,
  • Christine E. Hellweg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222413530
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 24
p. 13530

Abstract

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Nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) activation might be central to heavy ion-induced detrimental processes such as cancer promotion and progression and sustained inflammatory responses. A sensitive detection system is crucial to better understand its involvement in these processes. Therefore, a DD-tdTomato fluorescent protein-based reporter system was previously constructed with human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells expressing DD-tdTomato as a reporter under the control of a promoter containing NF-κB binding sites (HEK-pNFκB-DD-tdTomato-C8). Using this reporter cell line, NF-κB activation after exposure to different energetic heavy ions (16O, 95 MeV/n, linear energy transfer—LET 51 keV/µm; 12C, 95 MeV/n, LET 73 keV/μm; 36Ar, 95 MeV/n, LET 272 keV/µm) was quantified considering the dose and number of heavy ions hits per cell nucleus that double NF-κB-dependent DD-tdTomato expression. Approximately 44 hits of 16O ions and ≈45 hits of 12C ions per cell nucleus were required to double the NF-κB-dependent DD-tdTomato expression, whereas only ≈3 hits of 36Ar ions were sufficient. In the presence of Shield-1, a synthetic molecule that stabilizes DD-tdTomato, even a single particle hit of 36Ar ions doubled NF-κB-dependent DD-tdTomato expression. In conclusion, stabilization of the reporter protein can increase the sensitivity for NF-κB activation detection by a factor of three, allowing the detection of single particle hits’ effects.

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