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Paris, July 11, 2008
The images above show where different types of atoms are found in the cell. The top right panel indicates the location of sulfur, and the bottom left shows where platinum is found. The bottom right panel superimposes these two previous panels, with the ye
© Claude Le Sech/CNRS 2008. (These images can be obtained from the CNRS photo library, phototheque@cnrs-bellevue.fr).
One of the
fundamental challenges in radiation therapy is to destroy tumors with
irradiation while preserving healthy tissue. With hadrontherapy, the use of
fast ions as ionizing particles offers a major advantage because they deposit
most of their energy in the tissue at the end of their range. This method
enables tumors to be destroyed in a targeted manner by adjusting the initial
energy of the particles. Also, the ions used in this technique are more
effective in destroying cancerous tissue than conventional treatments (X-rays,
for example).
In this work,
the researchers combined, for the first time, ionic radiation with platinum-enriched
cells, using agents such as cis-platinum(2), similar to
molecules used in medicine. The impact of the incident ions (protons, carbon)
and the electrons ejected along the way causes the platinum atoms to become highly
ionized. The process of electron capture and emission that ensues significantly
increases damage to surrounding molecules and considerably enhances cell death
rate. In the presence of platinum, the effectiveness of ions at their end point
is increased by at least 50 percent, thus improving how well the tumor can be
targeted.
These results
suggest that the combination of hadrontherapy and the addition of heavy atoms
like platinum can improve both tumor targeting and the effectiveness of cancer
treatments while preserving healthy tissue (the onset of toxicity results from the
irradiation, and the molecules used are not themselves toxic for the cell).
This work paves the way for research on new, non-toxic radiosensitizing agents
– molecules, nanoparticles, and lysosomes(3) –containing large
numbers of atoms(4).
(1) Hadrontherapy uses atomic ions (such as protons or carbon ions, which are very effective in inducing therapeutic cell death) to treat cancerous tumors.
(2) Cis-platinum is a platinum-containing molecule that is frequently used in chemotherapy.
(3) Lysosomes are cellular components found in the cytoplasm. They contain proteins that break molecules and can destroy cells.
(4) In other words, high-Z atoms (atoms with a high atomic number, i.e., that have a large number of protons and electrons). (Z=78 for platinum.)
N. Usami, Y. Furusawa, K. Kobayashi, S. Lacombe, A Reynaud-Angelin, E. Sage, Ting-Di Wu, A. Croisy, J-L. Guerquin-Kern and C. Le Sech. Mammalian cells loaded with Platinum-containing molecules are sensitised to fast atomic ions. International Journal of Radiation Biology, 84, July 2008.
Researcher
Claude Le Sech
06 86 36 50 35
Claude.lesech@u-psud.fr
Public Information Officer
Laetitia Louis
01 44 96 51 37
Laetitia.louis@cnrs-dir.fr
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