Abstract

Simple SummaryRadiotherapy is a cornerstone care therapy for many tumors. Despite permanent advances in ra-diation dose delivery, there are unmet needs for further improvement. In principle, proton therapy offers a substantial clinical advantage over conventional modalities using photons in uniform-dose delivery of radiation to tumors, along with significant reductions in the harmful effects on normal tissue. However, the effect and mechanisms of a single high-dose delivery remain unclear. The study aimed to systematically observe and compare the biological effects of DNA damage and cell-cycle phase distribution in the human peripheral blood lymphocytes ex vivo irradiation model of normal tissue after proton versus conventional radiotherapy (X-rays). The effects induced at a single high-dose radiation exposure at a dose range of 8.00–20.00 Gy were studied. The results in-dicate a different distribution of DNA damage following high doses of irradiation with protons versus photons between donors, types of radiation, and doses. The results illuminate the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie differences in the distribution of DNA damage and cell-cycle phases. An understanding of the mechanisms in the distinct pathways induced by radiation can facilitate the development of more efficient radiotherapies with beneficial immunological conse-quences.This study systematically investigates how a single high-dose therapeutic proton beam versus X-rays influences cell-cycle phase distribution and DNA damage in human peripheral blood lymphocytes (HPBLs). Blood samples from ten volunteers (both male and female) were irradiated with doses of 8.00, 13.64, 15.00, and 20.00 Gy of 250 kV X-rays or 60 MeV protons. The dose–effect relations were calculated and distributed by plotting the frequencies of DNA damage of excess Premature Chromosome Condensation (PCC) fragments and rings in the G2/M phase, obtained via chemical induction with calyculin A. The Papworth’s u test was used to evaluate the distribution of DNA damage. The study shows that high doses of protons induce HPBL DNA damage in the G2/M phase differently than X-rays do. The results indicate a different distribution of DNA damage following high doses of irradiation with protons versus photons between donors, types of radiation, and doses. The proliferation index confirms the impact of high doses of mitosis and the influence of radiotherapy type on the different HPBL response. The results illuminate the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie differences in the distribution of DNA damage and cell-cycle phases; these findings may yield an improvement in the efficacy of the radiotherapies used.

Highlights

  • Radiation therapy (RT), called radiotherapy, is a cornerstone care therapy for many tumors

  • To investigate cell-cycle distribution and DNA damage in human peripheral blood lymphocytes under exposure to various high doses of proton radiotherapy, reference X-ray photons were used

  • These results indicate that high doses of 60 MeV protons can induce human peripheral blood lymphocytes (HPBLs) responses differently than conventionally used photon radiotherapy

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Summary

Introduction

Radiation therapy (RT), called radiotherapy, is a cornerstone care therapy for many tumors. The superior and unique depth–dose distribution properties of protons at the site called the “Bragg Peak” are used to achieve higher and more uniform dose delivery of radiation to tumors, along with significant reductions in the harmful effects on normal tissue [2,3]. This improving local control of tumors is simultaneously reducing toxicity and improving future quality of life [3]. The biology and mechanisms underlying FLASH RT, as well as the effect of a single high-dose delivery, remain unclear [5]

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