Modelling Spatial Scales of Dose Deposition and Radiolysis Products from Gold Nanoparticle Sensitisation of Proton Therapy in A Cell: From Intracellular Structures to Adjacent Cells

Gold nanoparticle (GNP) enhanced proton therapy is a promising treatment concept offering increased therapeutic effect. It has been demonstrated in experiments which provided indications that reactive species play a major role. Simulations of the radiolysis yield from GNPs within a cell model were p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dylan Peukert, Ivan Kempson, Michael Douglass, Eva Bezak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/21/12/4431
id doaj-f262940903ac4a08a0a849a1b97bd16b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f262940903ac4a08a0a849a1b97bd16b2020-11-25T03:08:38ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences1661-65961422-00672020-06-01214431443110.3390/ijms21124431Modelling Spatial Scales of Dose Deposition and Radiolysis Products from Gold Nanoparticle Sensitisation of Proton Therapy in A Cell: From Intracellular Structures to Adjacent CellsDylan Peukert0Ivan Kempson1Michael Douglass2Eva Bezak3Future Industries Institute, University of South Australia, Mawson Lakes, SA 5095, AustraliaFuture Industries Institute, University of South Australia, Mawson Lakes, SA 5095, AustraliaDepartment of Medical Physics, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, SA 5000, AustraliaDepartment of Physics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5005, AustraliaGold nanoparticle (GNP) enhanced proton therapy is a promising treatment concept offering increased therapeutic effect. It has been demonstrated in experiments which provided indications that reactive species play a major role. Simulations of the radiolysis yield from GNPs within a cell model were performed using the Geant4 toolkit. The effect of GNP cluster size, distribution and number, cell and nuclear membrane absorption and intercellular yields were evaluated. It was found that clusters distributed near the nucleus increased the nucleus yield by 91% while reducing the cytoplasm yield by 7% relative to a disperse distribution. Smaller cluster sizes increased the yield, 200 nm clusters had nucleus and cytoplasm yields 117% and 35% greater than 500 nm clusters. Nuclear membrane absorption reduced the cytoplasm and nucleus yields by 8% and 35% respectively to a permeable membrane. Intercellular enhancement was negligible. Smaller GNP clusters delivered near sub-cellular targets maximise radiosensitisation. Nuclear membrane absorption reduces the nucleus yield, but can damage the membrane providing another potential pathway for biological effect. The minimal effect on adjacent cells demonstrates that GNPs provide a targeted enhancement for proton therapy, only effecting cells with GNPs internalised. The provided quantitative data will aid further experiments and clinical trials.https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/21/12/4431Monte Carloradiosensitisationnanoparticlesproton therapyradiolysistargeted enhancement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dylan Peukert
Ivan Kempson
Michael Douglass
Eva Bezak
spellingShingle Dylan Peukert
Ivan Kempson
Michael Douglass
Eva Bezak
Modelling Spatial Scales of Dose Deposition and Radiolysis Products from Gold Nanoparticle Sensitisation of Proton Therapy in A Cell: From Intracellular Structures to Adjacent Cells
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Monte Carlo
radiosensitisation
nanoparticles
proton therapy
radiolysis
targeted enhancement
author_facet Dylan Peukert
Ivan Kempson
Michael Douglass
Eva Bezak
author_sort Dylan Peukert
title Modelling Spatial Scales of Dose Deposition and Radiolysis Products from Gold Nanoparticle Sensitisation of Proton Therapy in A Cell: From Intracellular Structures to Adjacent Cells
title_short Modelling Spatial Scales of Dose Deposition and Radiolysis Products from Gold Nanoparticle Sensitisation of Proton Therapy in A Cell: From Intracellular Structures to Adjacent Cells
title_full Modelling Spatial Scales of Dose Deposition and Radiolysis Products from Gold Nanoparticle Sensitisation of Proton Therapy in A Cell: From Intracellular Structures to Adjacent Cells
title_fullStr Modelling Spatial Scales of Dose Deposition and Radiolysis Products from Gold Nanoparticle Sensitisation of Proton Therapy in A Cell: From Intracellular Structures to Adjacent Cells
title_full_unstemmed Modelling Spatial Scales of Dose Deposition and Radiolysis Products from Gold Nanoparticle Sensitisation of Proton Therapy in A Cell: From Intracellular Structures to Adjacent Cells
title_sort modelling spatial scales of dose deposition and radiolysis products from gold nanoparticle sensitisation of proton therapy in a cell: from intracellular structures to adjacent cells
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Molecular Sciences
issn 1661-6596
1422-0067
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Gold nanoparticle (GNP) enhanced proton therapy is a promising treatment concept offering increased therapeutic effect. It has been demonstrated in experiments which provided indications that reactive species play a major role. Simulations of the radiolysis yield from GNPs within a cell model were performed using the Geant4 toolkit. The effect of GNP cluster size, distribution and number, cell and nuclear membrane absorption and intercellular yields were evaluated. It was found that clusters distributed near the nucleus increased the nucleus yield by 91% while reducing the cytoplasm yield by 7% relative to a disperse distribution. Smaller cluster sizes increased the yield, 200 nm clusters had nucleus and cytoplasm yields 117% and 35% greater than 500 nm clusters. Nuclear membrane absorption reduced the cytoplasm and nucleus yields by 8% and 35% respectively to a permeable membrane. Intercellular enhancement was negligible. Smaller GNP clusters delivered near sub-cellular targets maximise radiosensitisation. Nuclear membrane absorption reduces the nucleus yield, but can damage the membrane providing another potential pathway for biological effect. The minimal effect on adjacent cells demonstrates that GNPs provide a targeted enhancement for proton therapy, only effecting cells with GNPs internalised. The provided quantitative data will aid further experiments and clinical trials.
topic Monte Carlo
radiosensitisation
nanoparticles
proton therapy
radiolysis
targeted enhancement
url https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/21/12/4431
work_keys_str_mv AT dylanpeukert modellingspatialscalesofdosedepositionandradiolysisproductsfromgoldnanoparticlesensitisationofprotontherapyinacellfromintracellularstructurestoadjacentcells
AT ivankempson modellingspatialscalesofdosedepositionandradiolysisproductsfromgoldnanoparticlesensitisationofprotontherapyinacellfromintracellularstructurestoadjacentcells
AT michaeldouglass modellingspatialscalesofdosedepositionandradiolysisproductsfromgoldnanoparticlesensitisationofprotontherapyinacellfromintracellularstructurestoadjacentcells
AT evabezak modellingspatialscalesofdosedepositionandradiolysisproductsfromgoldnanoparticlesensitisationofprotontherapyinacellfromintracellularstructurestoadjacentcells
_version_ 1724665211531558912