Investigation of the Impact of Temporal Dose Delivery Patterns of Ion Irradiation with the Local Effect Model.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 BIOLOGY Radiation research Pub Date : 2024-04-01 DOI:10.1667/RADE-23-00074.1
Lisa Herr, Thomas Friedrich, Marco Durante, Michael Scholz
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Abstract

We present an extension of the Local Effect Model (LEM) to include time-dose relationships for predicting effects of protracted and split-dose ion irradiation at arbitrary LET. With this kinetic extension, the spatial and temporal induction and processing of DNA double strand breaks (DSB) in cellular nuclei can be simulated for a wide range of ion radiation qualities, doses and dose rates. The key concept of the extension is based on the joint spatial and temporal coexistence of initial DSB, leading to the formation of clustered DNA damage on the µm scale (as defined e.g., by the size scale of Mbp chromatin loops), which is considered to have an increased cellular lethality as compared to isolated, single DSB. By simulating the time dependent induction and repair of DSB and scoring of isolated and clustered DSB upon irradiation, the impact of dose rate and split dose on the cell survival probability can be computed. In a first part of this work, we systematically analyze the predicted impact of protraction in dependence of factors like dose, LET, ion species and radiosensitivity as characterized by the photon LQ-parameters. We establish links to common concepts that describe dose rate effects for low LET radiation. We also compare the model predictions to experimental data and find agreement with the general trends observed in the experiments. The relevant concepts of our approach are compared to other models suitable for predicting time effects. We investigate an apparent analogy between spatial and temporal concentration of radiation delivery, both leading to increased effectiveness, and discuss similarities and differences between the general dependencies of these clustering effects on their impacting factors. Finally, we conclude that the findings give additional support for the general concept of the LEM, i.e. the characterization of high LET radiation effects based on the distinction of just two classes of DSB (isolated DSB and clustered DSB).

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利用局部效应模型研究离子照射的时间剂量投放模式的影响
我们对局部效应模型(LEM)进行了扩展,将时间-剂量关系纳入其中,以预测在任意 LET 下长时间和分剂量离子辐照的效应。有了这一动力学扩展,就能在广泛的离子辐射质量、剂量和剂量率范围内模拟细胞核中DNA双链断裂(DSB)的时空诱导和处理过程。扩展的关键概念是基于初始 DSB 在空间和时间上的共存,从而形成微米级(例如,根据 Mbp 染色质环的大小定义)的成簇 DNA 损伤,与孤立的单个 DSB 相比,这种损伤被认为具有更高的细胞致死率。通过模拟辐照时DSB的随时间变化的诱导和修复以及孤立和成簇DSB的评分,可以计算出剂量率和分裂剂量对细胞存活概率的影响。在这项工作的第一部分,我们系统分析了根据剂量、LET、离子种类和辐射敏感性(以光子 LQ 参数为特征)等因素预测的辐照延时的影响。我们与描述低 LET 辐射剂量率效应的常见概念建立了联系。我们还将模型预测与实验数据进行了比较,发现模型预测与实验中观察到的一般趋势一致。我们将我们方法的相关概念与其他适合预测时间效应的模型进行了比较。我们研究了辐射传递的空间和时间集中之间的明显类比,两者都会导致有效性的提高,并讨论了这些集群效应对其影响因素的一般依赖性之间的异同。最后,我们得出结论,这些研究结果进一步支持了 LEM 的一般概念,即在区分两类 DSB(孤立 DSB 和集群 DSB)的基础上描述高 LET 辐射效应。
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来源期刊
Radiation research
Radiation research 医学-核医学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
8.80%
发文量
179
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Radiation Research publishes original articles dealing with radiation effects and related subjects in the areas of physics, chemistry, biology and medicine, including epidemiology and translational research. The term radiation is used in its broadest sense and includes specifically ionizing radiation and ultraviolet, visible and infrared light as well as microwaves, ultrasound and heat. Effects may be physical, chemical or biological. Related subjects include (but are not limited to) dosimetry methods and instrumentation, isotope techniques and studies with chemical agents contributing to the understanding of radiation effects.
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