Octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiation

Xuyang Zhang,1 Hao Wang,1 Jonathan Andrew Coulter,2 Ruijie Yang1 1Department of Radiation Oncology, Peking University Third Hospital, Beijing, China; 2School of Pharmacy, Queen’s University of Belfast, Belfast, UK Background: This study investigated the effectiveness and underpi...

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Main Authors: Zhang XY, Wang H, Coulter JA, Yang R
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2018-06-01
Series:International Journal of Nanomedicine
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/octaarginine-modified-gold-nanoparticles-enhance-the-radiosensitivity--peer-reviewed-article-IJN
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spelling doaj-8059d6e582cc48dd845e3de927bb968c2020-11-24T21:58:22ZengDove Medical PressInternational Journal of Nanomedicine1178-20132018-06-01Volume 133541355238891Octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiationZhang XYWang HCoulter JAYang RXuyang Zhang,1 Hao Wang,1 Jonathan Andrew Coulter,2 Ruijie Yang1 1Department of Radiation Oncology, Peking University Third Hospital, Beijing, China; 2School of Pharmacy, Queen’s University of Belfast, Belfast, UK Background: This study investigated the effectiveness and underpinning mechanisms of radiosensitization using octaarginine (R8)-modified gold nanoparticle–poly(ethylene glycol) (GNP-PEG-R8) in colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiotherapy in vitro. Method: In-house synthesized GNP-PEG was characterized by transmission electron micro­scopy, dynamic light scattering, ultraviolet–visible spectrophotometry, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy was used to quantify internalization. Direct cytotoxicity was established using the Cell Counting Kit-8, while radiosensitivity was determined using the gold standard in vitro clonogenic assay. Cell-cycle distribution, apoptosis, reactive oxygen species (ROS), and mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) were analyzed by flow cytometry, further exploring the key mechanisms driving GNP-PEG-R8 radiosensitization. Results: The core GNP diameter was 6.3±1.1 nm (mean±SD). Following functionalization, the hydrodynamic diameter increased to 19.7±2.8 nm and 27.8±1.8 nm for GNP-PEG and GNP-PEG-R8, with respective surface plasmon resonance peaks of 515 nm and 525 nm. Furthermore, incorporation of the R8 significantly increased nanoparticle internalization compared to GNP-PEG (p<0.001) over a 1 h treatment period. Functionalized GNPs confer little cytotoxicity below 400 nM. In clonogenic assays, radiation combined with GNP-PEG-R8 induced a significant reduction in colony formation compared with radiation alone, generating a sensitizer enhancement ratio of 1.59. Furthermore, GNP-PEG-R8 plus radiation predominantly induced cell-cycle arrest in the G2/M phase, increasing G2/M stalling by an additional 10% over GNP-PEG, markedly promoting apoptosis (p<0.001). Finally, ROS levels and alterations in MMP were investigated, indicating a highly significant (p<0.001) change in both parameters following the combined treatment of GNP-PEG-R8 and radiation over radiation alone. Conclusion: R8-modified GNPs were efficiently internalized by LS180 cells, exhibiting minimal cytotoxicity. This yielded significant radiosensitization in response to megavoltage radiation. GNP-PEG-R8 may enhance radiosensitivity by arresting cell cycle and inducing apoptosis, with elevated ROS identified as the likely initiator. Keywords: gold nanoparticles, octaarginine, colorectal cancer, megavoltage radiotherapy, mechanisms, radiosensitizationhttps://www.dovepress.com/octaarginine-modified-gold-nanoparticles-enhance-the-radiosensitivity--peer-reviewed-article-IJN
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhang XY
Wang H
Coulter JA
Yang R
spellingShingle Zhang XY
Wang H
Coulter JA
Yang R
Octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiation
International Journal of Nanomedicine
author_facet Zhang XY
Wang H
Coulter JA
Yang R
author_sort Zhang XY
title Octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiation
title_short Octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiation
title_full Octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiation
title_fullStr Octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiation
title_full_unstemmed Octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiation
title_sort octaarginine-modified gold nanoparticles enhance the radiosensitivity of human colorectal cancer cell line ls180 to megavoltage radiation
publisher Dove Medical Press
series International Journal of Nanomedicine
issn 1178-2013
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Xuyang Zhang,1 Hao Wang,1 Jonathan Andrew Coulter,2 Ruijie Yang1 1Department of Radiation Oncology, Peking University Third Hospital, Beijing, China; 2School of Pharmacy, Queen’s University of Belfast, Belfast, UK Background: This study investigated the effectiveness and underpinning mechanisms of radiosensitization using octaarginine (R8)-modified gold nanoparticle–poly(ethylene glycol) (GNP-PEG-R8) in colorectal cancer cell line LS180 to megavoltage radiotherapy in vitro. Method: In-house synthesized GNP-PEG was characterized by transmission electron micro­scopy, dynamic light scattering, ultraviolet–visible spectrophotometry, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy was used to quantify internalization. Direct cytotoxicity was established using the Cell Counting Kit-8, while radiosensitivity was determined using the gold standard in vitro clonogenic assay. Cell-cycle distribution, apoptosis, reactive oxygen species (ROS), and mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) were analyzed by flow cytometry, further exploring the key mechanisms driving GNP-PEG-R8 radiosensitization. Results: The core GNP diameter was 6.3±1.1 nm (mean±SD). Following functionalization, the hydrodynamic diameter increased to 19.7±2.8 nm and 27.8±1.8 nm for GNP-PEG and GNP-PEG-R8, with respective surface plasmon resonance peaks of 515 nm and 525 nm. Furthermore, incorporation of the R8 significantly increased nanoparticle internalization compared to GNP-PEG (p<0.001) over a 1 h treatment period. Functionalized GNPs confer little cytotoxicity below 400 nM. In clonogenic assays, radiation combined with GNP-PEG-R8 induced a significant reduction in colony formation compared with radiation alone, generating a sensitizer enhancement ratio of 1.59. Furthermore, GNP-PEG-R8 plus radiation predominantly induced cell-cycle arrest in the G2/M phase, increasing G2/M stalling by an additional 10% over GNP-PEG, markedly promoting apoptosis (p<0.001). Finally, ROS levels and alterations in MMP were investigated, indicating a highly significant (p<0.001) change in both parameters following the combined treatment of GNP-PEG-R8 and radiation over radiation alone. Conclusion: R8-modified GNPs were efficiently internalized by LS180 cells, exhibiting minimal cytotoxicity. This yielded significant radiosensitization in response to megavoltage radiation. GNP-PEG-R8 may enhance radiosensitivity by arresting cell cycle and inducing apoptosis, with elevated ROS identified as the likely initiator. Keywords: gold nanoparticles, octaarginine, colorectal cancer, megavoltage radiotherapy, mechanisms, radiosensitization
url https://www.dovepress.com/octaarginine-modified-gold-nanoparticles-enhance-the-radiosensitivity--peer-reviewed-article-IJN
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