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Enhancement of cell radiation sensitivity by pegylated gold nanoparticles

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Published 20 January 2010 2010 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine
, , Citation Chi-Jen Liu et al 2010 Phys. Med. Biol. 55 931 DOI 10.1088/0031-9155/55/4/002

0031-9155/55/4/931

Abstract

Biocompatible Au nanoparticles with surfaces modified by PEG (polyethylene glycol) were developed in view of possible applications for the enhancement of radiotherapy. Such nanoparticles exhibit preferential deposition at tumor sites due to the enhanced permeation and retention (EPR) effect. Here, we systematically studied their effects on EMT-6 and CT26 cell survival rates during irradiation for a dose up to 10 Gy with a commercial biological irradiator (Eaverage = 73 keV), a Cu-Kα1 x-ray source (8.048 keV), a monochromatized synchrotron source (6.5 keV), a radio-oncology linear accelerator (6 MeV) and a proton source (3 MeV). The percentage of surviving cells after irradiation was found to decrease by ∼2–45% in the presence of PEG-Au nanoparticles ([Au] = 400, 500 or 1000 µM). The cell survival rates decreased as a function of the dose for all sources and nanoparticle concentrations. These results could open the way to more effective cancer irradiation therapies by using nanoparticles with optimized surface treatment. Difficulties in applying MTT assays were also brought to light, showing that this approach is not suitable for radiobiology.

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