2 research outputs found
The Relative Biological Effect of Spread-Out Bragg Peak Protons in Sensitive and Resistant Tumor Cells
Purpose: Variations in the radiosensitivity of tumor cells within and between tumors impact tumor response to radiation, including the dose required to achieve permanent local tumor control. The increased expression of DNA-PKcs, a key component of a major DNA damage repair pathway in tumors treated by radiation, suggests that DNA-PKcsā dependent repair is likely a cause of tumor cell radioresistance. This study evaluates the relative biological effect of spread-out Bragg-peak protons in DNA-PKcsādeficient cells and the same cells transfected with a functional DNA-PKcs gene. Materials and Methods: A cloned radiation-sensitive DNA-PKcsādeficient tumor line and its DNA-PKcsātransfected resistant counterpart were used in this study. Thepresence of functional DNA-PKcs was evaluated by DNA-PKcs autophosphorylation.Cells to be proton irradiated or x-irradiated were obtained from the same single cell suspension and dilution series to maximize precision. Cells were concurrently exposed to 6-MV x-rays or mid 137-MeV spread-out Bragg peak protons and cultured for colony formation. Results: The surviving fraction data were well fit by the linear-quadratic model for each of 8 survival curves. The results suggest that the relative biological effectiveness of mid spread-out Bragg peak protons is approximately 6% higher in DNA-PKcsāmediated resistant tumor cells than in their DNA-PKcsādeficient and radiation-sensitive counterpart.Conclusion: DNA-PKcsādependent repair of radiation damage is less capable ofrepairing mid spread-out Bragg peak proton lesions than photon-induced lesions, suggesting protons may be more efficient at sterilizing DNA-PKcsāexpressing cells that are enriched in tumors treated by conventional fractionated dose x-irradiation.RST/Reactor Physics and Nuclear Material