Plasma induced DNA damage: Comparison with the effects of ionizing radiation

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Abstract

We use human primary fibroblasts for comparing plasma and gamma rays induced DNA damage. In both cases, DNA strand breaks occur, but of fundamentally different nature. Unlike gamma exposure, contact with plasma predominantly leads to single strand breaks and base-damages, while double strand breaks are mainly consequence of the cell repair mechanisms. Different cell signaling mechanisms are detected confirming this (ataxia telangiectasia mutated - ATM and ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3 related - ATR, respectively). The effective plasma doses can be tuned to match the typical therapeutic doses of 2 Gy. Tailoring the effective dose through plasma power and duration of the treatment enables safety precautions mainly by inducing apoptosis and consequently reduced frequency of micronuclei.

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Lazović, S., Maletić, D., Leskovac, A., Filipović, J., Puač, N., Malović, G., … Petrović, Z. L. (2014). Plasma induced DNA damage: Comparison with the effects of ionizing radiation. Applied Physics Letters, 105(12). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4896626

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