Impact of hypoxia on the double-strand break repair after photon and carbon ion irradiation of radioresistant HNSCC cells.

Sci Rep

UMR CNRS5822/IN2P3, IP2I, PRISME, Laboratoire de Radiobiologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire, Faculté de Médecine Lyon-Sud, Univ Lyon, Université Lyon, 69921, Oullins Cedex, France.

Published: December 2020

DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) induced by photon irradiation are the most deleterious damage for cancer cells and their efficient repair may contribute to radioresistance, particularly in hypoxic conditions. Carbon ions (C-ions) act independently of the oxygen concentration and trigger complex- and clustered-DSBs difficult to repair. Understanding the interrelation between hypoxia, radiation-type, and DNA-repair is therefore essential for overcoming radioresistance. The DSBs signaling and the contribution of the canonical non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ-c) and homologous-recombination (HR) repair pathways were assessed by immunostaining in two cancer-stem-cell (CSCs) and non-CSCs HNSCC cell lines. Detection and signaling of DSBs were lower in response to C-ions than photons. Hypoxia increased the decay-rate of the detected DSBs (γH2AX) in CSCs after photons and the initiation of DSB repair signaling (P-ATM) in CSCs and non-CSCs after both radiations, but not the choice of DSB repair pathway (53BP1). Additionally, hypoxia increased the NHEJ-c (DNA-PK) and the HR pathway (RAD51) activation only after photons. Furthermore, the involvement of the HR seemed to be higher in CSCs after photons and in non-CSCs after C-ions. Taken together, our results show that C-ions may overcome the radioresistance of HNSCC associated with DNA repair, particularly in CSCs, and independently of a hypoxic microenvironment.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7721800PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78354-7DOI Listing

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