ABSTRACT
The study of radiosensitivity and radioresistance of organisms exposed to ionizing radiation has acquired additional relevance since a new bio-concept, coined as The primacy of Proteome over Genome, was proposed and demonstrated elsewhere a few years ago. According to that finding, genome integrity would require an actively functioning Proteome. However, when exposure to radiation takes place, Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) from water radiolysis induce protein carbonylation (PC), an irreversible oxidative Proteome damage. The bio-models used in that study were the radiosensitive Escherichia coli and the extraordinarily robust Deinococcus radiodurans. The production of ROS induces protective reactions rendering them non-reactive forms. Protective entities present in the cytosol, moieties smaller than 3 kDa, shield the Proteome against ROS, yielding protection against carbonylation. Shown in the present study is the fact that the fate of proteins functionality is determined by the magnitude of the Protein Carbonylation Yield (YPC), a quantity here analytically defined using published YPC numerical results. Analytical YPC expressions for E. coli and D. radiodurans were the input for a phenomenological approach, where the radiobiological magnitudes PP and PN, the probabilities for production of protein damage and ROS neutralization, respectively, were also analytically deduced. These highly relevant magnitudes, associated with key radiosensitivity and radioresistance issues, are addressed and discussed in this study. Among the plethora of information and conclusions derived from the present study, those endowed with higher conceptual degree, vis-à-vis the "Primacy of Proteome over Genome" concept, are as follows: (1) the ROS neutralization process in D. radiodurans reaches a maximum at a dose interval corresponding to the repairing shoulder. Therefore, it is a signature of the higher efficiency of the PC neutralization process. (2) ROS neutralization in D. radiodurans is nearly one order of magnitude higher than in E. coli, thus accounting for its extraordinary radioresistance. (3) Both physical (ROS-induced carbonyl radicals) and biological (protein modifications) processes are imbedded in the Protein Carbonylation Yield. The amalgamation of these two processes was accomplished by means of a statistical formalism.
Subject(s)
Escherichia coli , Proteome , Reactive Oxygen Species , Proteome/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Radiation ToleranceABSTRACT
Boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) is a binary treatment involving selective accumulation of boron carriers in a tumor followed by irradiation with a thermal or epithermal neutron beam. The neutron capture reaction with a boron-10 nucleus yields high linear energy transfer (LET) particles, alpha and (7)Li, with a range of 5 to 9 µm. These particles can only travel very short distances and release their damaging energy directly into the cells containing the boron compound. We aimed to evaluate proliferation, apoptosis and extracellular matrix (ECM) modifications of B16F10 melanoma and normal human melanocytes after BNCT. The amounts of soluble collagen and Hsp47, indicating collagen synthesis in the ECM, as well as the cellular markers of apoptosis, were investigated. BNCT decreased proliferation, altered the ECM by decreasing collagen synthesis and induced apoptosis by regulating Bcl-2/Bax in melanoma. Additionally, BNCT also increased the levels of TNF receptor and the cleaved caspases 3, 7, 8 and 9 in melanoma. These results suggest that multiple pathways related to cell death and cell cycle arrest are involved in the treatment of melanoma by BNCT.