Abstract Metallic nanoparticles can improve the accuracy and effectiveness of conventional radiotherapy in the treatment of solid tumors through a light-matter interaction known as the Auger effect. In this work, we present the assembly of an iron oxide (Fe3O4) nanoparticle (NPs) layer within a biocompatible polyelectrolyte film using ionic self-assembly to enable the spatial separation of NPs from their target cells. Films exhibited uniform nanoparticle coverage as well as strong stability in cell culture conditions. To investigate the applicability of NMDR with non-internalized NPs, conditions with (NP-PEM) and without (PEM) embedded nanoparticles were used to evaluate the therapeutic effect of physically separated nanoparticles on cells cultured on the film surface via a measure of intracellular reactive oxygen (ROS) generation and histone phosphorylation (yH2AX) after irradiation from a 137Cesium source. Cells cultured on NP-PEM demonstrated a 78.4% increase in ROS generation when compared to cells cultured on PEM films. When adjusting for cell count, NP-PEM films induce 70.5% greater ROS generation. In investigating nanoparticle-mediated deposition of radiation (NMDR), these films allow for the determination of the extent of the therapeutic effect when NPs are not internalized into their targeted cells, potentially providing indications with respect to off-target effects. Cells were irradiated on films with nanoparticle distances from 25.9 nm to 97.5 nm to interrogate the NMDR effect size at a range of distances. yH2AX phosphorylation exhibited an exponential decay until 69.8 nm, where there was no difference when compared to nanoparticle-free films. This work highlights the ability of iron oxide NPs to deliver NMDR at a known, quantifiable distance, providing insights for further translational applications.
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