Clinical parameters and empirical evidence are the primary determinants for current treatment planning in radiation oncology. Personalized medicine in radiation oncology is only at the very beginning to take the genetic background of a tumor entity into consideration to define an individual treatment regimen, the total dose or the combination with a specific anticancer agent. Likewise, stratification of patients towards proton radiotherapy is linked to its physical advantageous energy deposition at the tumor site with minimal healthy tissue being co-irradiated distal to the target volume. Hence, the fact that photon and proton irradiation also induce different qualities of DNA damages, which require differential DNA damage repair mechanisms has been completely neglected so far. These subtle differences could be efficiently exploited in a personalized treatment approach and could be integrated into personalized treatment planning. A differential requirement of the two major DNA double-strand break repair pathways, homologous recombination and non-homologous end joining, was recently identified in response to proton and photon irradiation, respectively, and subsequently influence the mode of ionizing radiation-induced cell death and susceptibility of tumor cells with defects in DNA repair machineries to either quality of ionizing radiation. This review focuses on the differential DNA-damage responses and subsequent biological processes induced by photon and proton irradiation in dependence of the genetic background and discusses their impact on the unicellular level and in the tumor microenvironment and their implications for combined treatment modalities.
Placental growth factor (PlGF) is a pro-angiogenic, N-glycosylated growth factor, which is secreted under pathologic situations. Here, we investigated the regulation of PlGF in response to ionizing radiation (IR) and its role for tumor angiogenesis and radiosensitivity. Secretion and expression of PlGF was induced in multiple tumor cell lines (medulloblastoma, colon and lung adenocarcinoma) in response to irradiation in a dose-and time-dependent manner. Early upregulation of PlGF expression and secretion in response to irradiation was primarily observed in p53 wild-type tumor cells, whereas tumor cells with mutated p53 only showed a minimal or delayed response. Mechanistic investigations with genetic and pharmacologic targeting of p53 corroborated regulation of PlGF by the tumor suppressor p53 in response to irradiation under normoxic and hypoxic conditions, but with so far unresolved mechanisms relevant for its minimal and delayed expression in tumor cells with a p53-mutated genetic background. Probing a paracrine role of IR-induced PlGF secretion in vitro, migration of endothelial cells was specifically increased towards irradiated PlGF wild type but not towards irradiated PlGF-knockout (PIGF-ko) medulloblastoma cells. Tumors derived from these PlGF-ko cells displayed a reduced growth rate, but similar tumor vasculature formation as in their wild-type counterparts. Interestingly though, high-dose irradiation strongly reduced microvessel density with a concomitant high rate of complete tumor regression only in the PlGF-ko tumors. IMPLICATIONS: Our study shows a strong paracrine vasculature-protective role of PlGF as part of a p53-regulated IR-induced resistance mechanism and suggest PlGF as a promising target for a combined treatment modality with RT.
<p>Supplementary Data supporting results of main manuscript; with other cell lines; with control experiments; includes data table Figure S1. PlGF secretion is increased in multiple cell lines after irradiation. Figure S2. PlGF mRNA expression is increased in response to IR. Figure S3. P53 is a major regulator of PlGF in response to IR. Figure S4. Generation of PlGF knockout cell lines using CRISPR/Cas9 system. Table S1. Correlation of genetic background to tumor cell lines to early PlGF expression in response to IR.</p>
<p>Supplementary Data supporting results of main manuscript; with other cell lines; with control experiments; includes data table Figure S1. PlGF secretion is increased in multiple cell lines after irradiation. Figure S2. PlGF mRNA expression is increased in response to IR. Figure S3. P53 is a major regulator of PlGF in response to IR. Figure S4. Generation of PlGF knockout cell lines using CRISPR/Cas9 system. Table S1. Correlation of genetic background to tumor cell lines to early PlGF expression in response to IR.</p>
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