Abstract

In this paper, we studied the functional effects of cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) on the esophageal cancer cell line (KYSE-30) by direct and indirect treatment and fibroblast cell lines as normal cells. KYSE-30 cells were treated with CAP at different time points of 60, 90, 120 and, 240s for direct exposure and 90, 180, 240 and, 360s for indirect exposure. Cell viability was studied by 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide and apoptosis induction in the treated cells was measured by Annexin-V/PI using flow cytometry. The expression of apoptotic related genes (BAX/BCL-2) was analyzed by real-time polymerase chain reaction. Moreover, the genotoxicity was analyzed by comet assay. Cell viability results showed that direct CAP treatment has a markedly cytotoxic impact on the reduction of KYSE-30 cells at 60s (p = 0.000), while indirect exposure was less impactful (p > 0.05). The results of the Annexin-V/PI staining confirmed this analysis. Subsequently, the genotoxicity study of the direct CAP treatment demonstrated a longer tail-DNA length and caused increase in DNA damage in the cells (p < 0.00001) as well as shift BAX/BCL-2 toward apoptosis. The concentration of H2O2 and NO2- in direct CAP treatment was significantly higher than indirect (p > 0.05). Treatment with direct CAP showed genotoxicity in cancer cells. Collectively, our results pave a deeper understanding of CAP functions and the way for further investigations in the field of esophageal cancer treatment.

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