Abstract

The human body is constantly exposed to ionizing radiation of different qualities. Especially the exposure to high-LET (linear energy transfer) particles increases due to new tumor therapy methods using e.g. carbon ions. Furthermore, upon radiation accidents, a mixture of radiation of different quality is adding up to human radiation exposure. Finally, long-term space missions such as the mission to mars pose great challenges to the dose assessment an astronaut was exposed to. Currently, DSB counting using γH2AX foci is used as an exact dosimetric measure for individuals. Due to the size of the γH2AX IRIF of ~ 0.6 µm, it is only possible to count DSB when they are separated by this distance. For high-LET particle exposure, the distance of the DSB is too small to be separated and the dose will be underestimated. In this study, we developed a method where it is possible to count DSB which are separated by a distance of ~ 140 nm. We counted the number of ionizing radiation-induced pDNA-PKcs (DNA-PKcs phosphorylated at T2609) foci (size = 140 nm ± 20 nm) in human HeLa cells using STED super-resolution microscopy that has an intrinsic resolution of 100 nm. Irradiation was performed at the ion microprobe SNAKE using high-LET 20 MeV lithium (LET = 116 keV/µm) and 27 MeV carbon ions (LET = 500 keV/µm). pDNA-PKcs foci label all DSB as proven by counterstaining with 53BP1 after low-LET γ-irradiation where separation of individual DSB is in most cases larger than the 53BP1 gross size of about 0.6 µm. Lithium ions produce (1.5 ± 0.1) IRIF/µm track length, for carbon ions (2.2 ± 0.2) IRIF/µm are counted. These values are enhanced by a factor of 2–3 compared to conventional foci counting of high-LET tracks. Comparison of the measurements to PARTRAC simulation data proof the consistency of results. We used these data to develop a measure for dosimetry of high-LET or mixed particle radiation exposure directly in the biological sample. We show that proper dosimetry for radiation up to a LET of 240 keV/µm is possible.

Highlights

  • The human body is constantly exposed to ionizing radiation of different qualities

  • It is proven that pDNA-PKcs works as a biodosimetry marker for low-linear energy transfer (LET) radiation

  • It was tested whether pDNA-PKcs labels every double-strand breaks (DSB) after low-LET reference radiation just as it is assumed for γH2AX and 53BP1

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Summary

Introduction

The human body is constantly exposed to ionizing radiation of different qualities. Especially the exposure to high-LET (linear energy transfer) particles increases due to new tumor therapy methods using e.g. carbon ions. Comparison of the measurements to PARTRACsimulation data proof the consistency of results We used these data to develop a measure for dosimetry of high-LET or mixed particle radiation exposure directly in the biological sample. There is a need for fast, simple, and scalable biological dose assessment methods for triage, which was found to be the counting of double-strand breaks (DSB) via protein modifications or accumulation upon radiation. High LET particles (LET > 10 keV/μm), which are present e.g. in galactic cosmic rays, in the radiotherapy with carbon ions, in the fast neutron irradiation from atomic bombs, or in the α-radiation from natural radon exposures, induce more than one DSB along with the ion traversal through a cell. This is the region where the γH2AX and 53BP1 assays fail, and a new, reliable and small label for DSB must be found

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