Abstract
Radiation damage following the ionising radiation of tissue has different scenarios and mechanisms depending on the projectiles or radiation modality. We investigate the radiation damage effects due to shock waves produced by ions. We analyse the strength of the shock wave capable of directly producing DNA strand breaks and, depending on the ion's linear energy transfer, estimate the radius from the ion's path, within which DNA damage by the shock wave mechanism is dominant. At much smaller values of linear energy transfer, the shock waves turn out to be instrumental in propagating reactive species formed close to the ion's path to large distances, successfully competing with diffusion.
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Introduction
The physics and chemistry of radiation damage caused by irradiation with heavy ions has recently become a subject of an intense interest because of the use of ion beams in cancer therapy (IBCT)1,2,3. IBCT allows a delivery of high doses into tumors, maximising cancer cell destruction and simultaneously minimising the radiation damage to surrounding healthy tissue. Ion beam techniques utilise the fundamental difference in energy deposition profile between massive projectiles and massless photons.
The key feature utilised by IBCT is the Bragg peak, which is a sharp maximum in the linear energy transfer (LET) of ions at the end of their trajectories. The Bragg peak occurs as a result of the increase up to the maximum values of the inelastic cross sections of interactions with the molecules of the medium as the speed of the projectile decreases. Therefore, ions deposit most of their destructive energy to the tissue within 1 mm and the dose deposition quickly drops to almost zero distal to the peak. The location of the Bragg peak depends on the initial energy of ions. Typical depths for carbon ions (in liquid water representing tissue), widely used in IBCT, range from about 8 to 28 cm as the initial energy ranges from 200 to 430 MeV/nucleon. Hence, a deeply-seated tumour can be scanned with a well focused pencil beam of ions with minimal lateral scattering.
Over the past 20 years, technological and clinical advances of IBCT have developed more rapidly than the understanding of radiation damage with ions. Although an empirical approach has produced exciting results for thousands of patients thus far, many questions concerning the mechanisms involved in radiation damage with ions remain open and the fundamental quantitative scientific knowledge of the involved physical, chemical and biological effects is, to a significant extent, missing. Indeed, the series of works that elucidated the importance of low-energy (below ionisation threshold) electrons appeared in ca 2000, while the treatment of patients at GSI (Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung, Darmstadt, Germany) started in 1997. The molecular mechanism of a double strand break (DSB), the most important DNA lesion, still remains unknown. Even the significance of the relation of DNA damage (including DSBs) compared to the damage of other cellular components to the cell death is not entirely clear. This list can be continued. Besides IBCT, the mechanisms of biodamage due to irradiation with heavy ions have attracted attention in relation with radioprotection from galactic cosmic rays3.
The multiscale approach to the physics of radiation damage has the goal of developing this knowledge at the nanoscale and molecular level and finding the relation between the characteristics of incident particles and resultant biological damage1,4. This approach is unique in distinguishing phenomena relevant to radiation damage at a given time, space, or energy scale and assessing the resultant damage based on these effects. The significance of understanding the fundamental mechanisms of radiation damage in order to exploit this knowledge for practical applications has inspired the European COST Action5,6, which supports collaborations of physicists, chemists and biologists, studying these phenomena both theoretically and experimentally.
While the Bragg peak location answers a question of where most of the damage occurs, we are raising a question of how the damage happens. Presently, we investigate the effects that stem from a large inhomogeneity of the dose distribution in the vicinity of the Bragg peak on biological damage. They are the consequences of the following scenario.
The absorbtion of energy by the medium associated with dose results in ionisation and excitation of molecules of this medium. These events happen within 10−16 s after an ion's passage. The next stage of local energy relaxation happens after 10−15 to 10−13 s when locally produced secondary electrons interact with the medium (effects similar to electron-phonon coupling take place) and the energy becomes distributed between the vibrational and translational degrees of freedom of the molecules. This, according to the predictions of Refs. 7,8 for carbon ions, happens within a cylinder of about one nm radius, which is so small that the temperature within this cylinder increases by over 1000 K8 by 10−13 s (we will refer to it as the “hot cylinder”). This increase of temperature brings about a rapid increase of pressure (up to 1 GPa) compared to the atmospheric pressure outside the cylinder. Such circumstances cause the onset of a cylindrical shock wave described by the strong explosion scenario9. The pressure rapidly increases on the wave front and then decreases in the wake. The shock wave propagates for about 10 ps, loses energy and decays. The intriguing questions that were raised in Refs. 8,9 are what such a shock wave can do with biomolecules such as DNA located in the region of its propagation through the medium and what other effects can be explained by the transport related to the shock wave. The forces acting on DNA segments were predicted to be as large as 2 nN, which is more than enough to break a covalent bond, causing a strand break; however, these forces are only acting for a short time and it remained unclear whether this is sufficient to cause severe damage to DNA molecules.
Results
In this work, we study the effects of the interaction of the shock wave formed in a liquid water medium following the traverse of an ion through this medium at different values of LET. Several factors contribute to the values of LET: the charge of the ion, closeness to the Bragg peak and the composition of the medium. The value of 0.9 keV/nm corresponds to the Bragg peak of a carbon ion, whose effective charge in that region is about +310. This effective charge is determined by the effect of charge transfer, since ions pick off electrons as they slow down. In general, the LET is proportional to the square of the effective charge of the ion. Therefore heavier ions are characterised with higher values of LET. The actual value of charge fluctuates about the effective value, therefore LET fluctuates as well. For instance, fluctuations of the charge of a carbon ion can change the LET by up to 80%11. In a more dense medium than liquid water, such as tissue that contains sugars, amino acids and other species, the value of LET may be higher by up to 20%12. As a result the LET for carbon ions (at some segments of their trajectories) in tissue may be as large as 2 keV/nm.
We use the value of LET as a parameter describing the energy propagated by the shock wave and analyse the physical conditions in which its action is significant or even dominant for radiation damage assessment. The first effect of a shock wave is the direct thermomechanical damage of a DNA molecule as a result of interaction with the shock wave and we explore it using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The second effect is the propagation of reacting species as a result of collective motion initiated by the shock wave.
In eucaryotic cells, DNA molecules are packed into chromatin fibers. A nucleosome, a histone-protein octamer wrapped about with a DNA double helix, is the primary structural unit of chromatin. Therefore, we carried out the MD simulations of the interaction of the cylindrical shock wave originating from ion's path with a fragment of a DNA molecule situated on the surface of a nucleosome. This arrangement is shown in Fig. 1; the ion's path is perpendicular to the paper plane as well as the axis of the nucleosome disk. Since the action of the shock wave depends on the distance from the ion's path, we thoroughly study the effect on three base pairs, located between 1.5 and 2.2 nm from the ion's path. The simulations were done for four values of LET, 0.9, 1.73, 4.745 and 7.195 keV/nm, corresponding to the predicted values of LET at the Bragg peak for carbon, neon, argon and iron ions, respectively11. Among these, carbon ions are currently the most used ions for heavy-ion therapy. Iron ions are important for the space-mission safety assessment. Between these are neon and argon ions, which are considered for medical applications; they are used in a number of experimental studies3.
The radius of the hot cylinder for LET = 0.9 keV/nm is taken to be 1 nm. This corresponds to the average radius within which secondary electrons lose most of their energy13. This estimate can be obtained from the random walk (diffusion) of secondary electrons from the ion's path that gives , where l = 0.36 nm is the elastic mean free path of 35-eV electrons and k ≈ 20 is the number of collisions after which these electrons lose most of their energy (see the supplemental material).
Noticeable distortion due to the shock wave is apparent 10 ps after the expansion starts. This can be seen in the movie, which can be found in the supplemental material. This distortion comprises the rupture of the secondary structure of the most exposed parts of the DNA molecule, manifested by the nonnative orientation of DNA nucleotides. Many hydrogen bonds are broken and the bases are located outside the DNA double helix. However, these distortions are reversible, while our main interest is in the investigation of more permanent covalent bond breaking events. Until the computer code allowing us to model bond breaking events is implemented within MBN Explorer software14, the most suitable package for the simulation of a shock wave interacting with a nucleosome has been NAMD15 with the CHARMM2216 force field. In the latter, the interaction potentials used for the description of covalent bonds (relevant for strand breaks) are harmonic. Such a force field does not allow us to observe bond breaking events directly, see description of methods below for further details.
Therefore, in order to study whether the covalent bonds in the DNA backbone can be broken during the shock wave action, we calculated the energy temporarily deposited to these bonds. If this energy exceeded the binding energy of a given bond, we assumed that thermomechanical stresses in the DNA fragment were sufficiently high to break the bond. The corresponding binding energies are referred to as thresholds for breaking the DNA backbone covalent bonds; they are between 3 and 6 eV17. Even though the thresholds may be lower (even as low as 0.3 eV) in the environment consequent the ion's passage18, we keep high thresholds in order to obtain conservative estimates for the action of the shock wave.
The results of the analysis of MD simulations performed for four values of LET (0.9, 1.73, 4.745 and 7.195 keV/nm) are presented in Fig. 2. The shock wave propagating through a nucleosome transfers part of its energy to covalent bonds of the DNA backbone. Due to the oscillatory motion of the bound atoms the potential energy of the bond oscillates with the characteristic period of ~ 10 fs. Below, we refer to the local maxima in this dependence as the energies carried by the bond during half a period of the oscillation. For the chosen fragment of the DNA backbone located between 1.5 and 2.2 nm from the ion's path (36 bonds) one can calculate the distribution of these bond energies. In MD simulations we have monitored the dynamics of the selected bonds during the time of 10 ps, sufficient for the shock wave front to reach the distances ~ 10 nm, which is well beyond the selected DNA backbone region. During this time the bonds from the selected DNA region make ~ 1.8 × 104 oscillations. This gives us the total number of bond energy records equal to Nr ≈ 3.6 × 104. For further details to this calculation see section Methods below.
The distributions of the bond energy records can be represented by a histogram that assigns to every interval of energy (E, E + δE), the number of records corresponding to the bond energies from this interval. For each value of LET used in the simulations, we build such a histogram and refer to it as the bond energies distribution. These distributions (normalised to the total number of records Nr for each value of LET) are shown in Fig. 2, where ln(1/NrdN/dE) is plotted vs. corresponding energy interval.
At small values of E ≤ 0.1 eV, the distributions for all values of LET coincide, which means that at the considered LETs small excitation energy channels are saturated, i.e., the passing shock wave excites almost every exposed bond, at least somewhat. At higher values of E the distributions deviate from each other and indicate different linear-like dependencies on E for different LETs. This behaviour suggests that the distributions correspond to Boltzmann distributions with different temperatures. The spread of values of ln(1/NrdN/dE) shows that the distributions are not entirely thermalised. They deviate from linear patterns, especially at large energies. Nonetheless, the dominating Boltzmann-like behaviour of these distributions, allows us to fit them as
where δE = 0.01 eV is the width of the energy bin, δN is the number of records with energy between E and E + δE, deposited in selected covalent bonds, normalisation constant N0 and temperature T are parameters and kB is the Boltzmann constant.
Both parameters, N0 and T, are determined from the fitting of the distributions obtained from MD simulations. Note that the value of parameter N0 = 2.17 × 104 is smaller than Nr because it corresponds only to the records of relatively large bond energies created by the shock wave propagation. This reduction can be characterised by a dimensionless parameter a0, introduced as follows:
From fitting, we have derived a0 = −0.52. Then, from Eq. (2) one obtains N0 = Nr exp(a0). This constant depends on properties of the system being investigated, such as the spatial position of DNA covalent bonds, distance from the ion's path, etc.
Parameters T are the temperatures corresponding to the thermal parts of distributions (for the four values of LET) shown as linear fits in Fig. 2. The values of T are 870, 1130, 2580 and 3970 K, indicating that the temperature increase above the temperature of the medium before the interaction with the shock wave, T0 = 310 K (corresponding to a biological system), is directly proportional to LET,
where α = 494 K·nm·keV−1.
The next step is to count the number of energy records of selected covalent bonds of the backbone of a DNA molecule exceeding a given threshold. This is done by direct counting of bond energy records, for which E > E0, where E0 is a threshold; e.g., for E0 = 2.5 eV, we count the records to the right of the dashed vertical line in Fig. 2. The results of such counting, corresponding to the four values of LET and three values of thresholds, are shown as stars in the inset of Fig. 2. [Only five stars, corresponding to LET = 4.745 keV/nm for E0 equal to 2 and 2.5 eV and to LET = 7.195 keV/nm for all three values of E0, appear in the range shown.] Alternatively, these numbers can be estimated from integrating Eq. (1) over energies E, exceeding a chosen threshold E0:
This integration corresponds to the area under the curve (shaded triangle in Fig. 2). Since parameters N0 and T are fitted, this procedure allows us to predict the number of these over-threshold bond energy records for any value of LET. These numbers correspond to the number of single strand breaks caused by the ion's passage and their dependence on LET is plotted in the inset of Fig. 2. The estimated numbers are smaller than the counted because the estimated numbers rely on the thermal part of the spectrum, while the counting is mostly affected by the non-thermal high-energy “tail” of the spectrum. This along with high values of E0 makes our predictions conservative. The inset of Fig. 2 shows that the number of breaks increases very steeply after the critical value of LET is reached; three curves correspond to different thresholds for covalent bond breaking. The number of bond-breaking events, N, is equal to the number of strand breaks only until it becomes close to 10. Larger values of N corresponding to LET ≳ 7 keV/nm (for E0 = 2 eV) mean that each bond may be broken several times and, therefore, overestimates the number of strand breaks.
In order to compare the number of strand breaks due to the shock wave action to chemical effects, we calculate the probability of a strand break based on bond-breaking events using Poisson statistics. From the predicted number of bond breaking N, we can calculate the probabilities for the exact number ν of strand breaks to occur, P(ν) = exp(–N) Nν/ν!. Then, the probability Psw of at least one strand break in a given segment of a DNA molecule is equal to 1 − P(0), i.e.,
The dependence of this probability on LET for different thresholds is shown in Fig. 3, where we compare this probability to the probability of producing a single strand break owing to chemical effects in a similar DNA segment located at the same distance from the ion's path. The probability of SSBs due to chemical effects, Pch, is estimated (see the supplemental material) as
where β = (1.1 ± 0.5) × 10−3 and LET0 = 0.9 keV/nm. The uncertainty in this expression is shown in Fig. 3 by the shaded area.
Discussion
From the analysis of Fig. 3, we can infer an important result: for a given threshold, the shock wave breaking effect starts at a certain critical value of LET. After that, the probability increases very steeply, quickly overcoming chemical effects that include interactions of DNA molecules with free radicals, secondary electrons, holes, solvated electrons, etc. Fig. 3 indicates that breaking bonds due to the shock wave mechanism starts (for the 3-eV threshold) at LET ≈ 4 keV/nm and by 5 keV/nm it becomes the dominant effect in radiation damage. Two smaller thresholds of 2 and 2.5 eV are shown for a comparison.
From this example we can conclude that ions with LET larger than 5 keV/nm, e.g., for ions heavier than Ar in liquid water, the bond breaking due to the shock wave effect is dominant when DNA segments are within about 2 nm of the ion's path. The strength of a shock wave is proportional to the pressure at the wave front. In Ref. 9, it is shown that the pressure at the wave front is proportional to the square of the speed of the wave front. This speed is proportional to , where ρ is the distance from the ion's path, therefore the pressure and, hence, the forces stretching the bonds, is proportional to LETρ−2 (see the supplemental material). Based on inferences from our simulations, we can estimate the radius of the shock wave effect dominance, ρmax, as
where LETcrit = 5 keV/nm is the smallest value of LET at which the shock wave effect starts dominating over chemical effects at the distance of ρ0 = 2 nm.
The above probability for chemical effects is proportional to the fluence of secondary particles. According to the predictions of Ref. 19, in the region of interest, this quantity is inversely proportional to the distance from the ion's path. On the other side, the number of breaks N is proportional to the pressure on the wave front, and, therefore, inversely proportional to the distance squared. The comparison of these effects, shown in Fig. 3 at a given radius, can be extended to different radii. In Fig. 4, the ratio of probabilities, Pch/Psw, is shown as a function of the distance ρ from the path and the LET. Yellow and red areas indicate the dominance of direct damage by shock waves. These predictions are done using E0 = 2 eV. Even this threshold value may be overestimated, for instance, in the presence of solvated electrons attached to a DNA molecule, it may be several times smaller18.
Now we want to turn our discussion to another effect, also related to the shock wave, which is playing a significant role at values of LET that are large enough to produce a shock wave, but not sufficiently large to cause the covalent bond rupture. The analysis shows that even at small values of LET, typical for the plateau region in the LET dependence on depth (well before the Bragg peak), the shock wave is formed, however it damps and becomes acoustic at radii under 10 nm; at LET = 0.9 keV/nm shock waves propagate further than 10 nm.
The study done in Ref. 9 suggests that there is a considerable collective radial flow, which propagates the high density region of medium with the wave front. The maximal mass flux density of a cylindrical shock wave is given by , where is the maximum density of water, which occurs at the wave front and u is the radial velocity. This flux density is inversely proportional to radius ρ and is linear with respect to the (see the supplemental material). It sharply drops to zero in the wake of the wave along with the density. A sharp rarefication of the volume in the wake of the wave follows from the results of Ref. 9. This is the effect of cavitation on a nanometre scale and due to this effect the water molecules of the hot cylinder along with all reactive species formed in this cylinder are pushed out by the radial flow. Such a mechanism of propagation of reactive species is competitive with the diffusion mechanism, studied in Monte Carlo simulations done using track structure codes20.
Intriguingly, the cylindrical shock wave accomplishes the transfer of reacting species such as hydroxyl and solvated electrons, which play important roles in chemical DNA damage18,21 much more effectively than the diffusion mechanism. Indeed, the time at which thewave front reaches radius ρ is given by 9, where is the density of undisturbed water. This time has to be compared to diffusion times, which can be estimated for different reacting species as ρ2/D, where ρ is the distance from the ion's path and D is the corresponding diffusion coefficient. The ratio of these times is equal to . For all relevant species, the diffusion coefficient is less than 10−4 cm2/s22. Therefore, the above ratio is less than , which is much less than unity even for protons. For instance, for carbon ion projectiles, the wave front reaches 5 nm from the path in 2.8 ps after the ion's traverse, while hydroxyl radicals reach the same distance via the diffusion mechanism in about 9 ns, a more than 3000 times longer time.
In conclusion, the effects following from the local heating of the medium in the vicinity of ion paths are quite striking. Indeed, our MD simulations of a shock wave on a nanometre scale, initiated by an ion propagating in tissue-like medium, demonstrate that such a wave generates stresses, capable of breaking covalent bonds in a backbone of a DNA molecule located within 1.5 nm from the ion's path when LET exceeds 4 keV/nm and this becomes the dominating effect of strand breaking at LET ≳ 5 keV. [These values correspond to our conservative estimates (E0 = 3 eV). They may be much lower if the actual thresholds appear to be smaller18.] The LET of ~ 4 − 5 keV/nm corresponds to the Bragg peak values for ions close to Ar and heavier in liquid water. Besides the dramatic effects at such high values of LET, we found that weaker shock waves produced by carbon ions or even protons transport the highly reactive species, hostile to DNA molecules, much more effectively than diffusion. This effect can become the key for the experimental observation of thermomechanical effects. The acoustic waves induced by ions were detected23,24 and now we are looking forward to the experimental validation of the shock waves and their effects.
The notion of thermomechanical effects represents a paradigm shift in our understanding of radiation damage due to ions and requires re-evaluation of relative biological effectiveness because of collective transport effects for all ions and direct covalent bond breaking by shock waves for ions heavier than argon. These effects will also have to be considered for high-density ion beams, irradiation with intensive laser fields and other conditions prone to causing high gradients of temperature and pressure on a nanometre scale.
Methods
The crystallographic structure of a nucleosome for MD simulations was taken from the Protein Data Bank (PDB) using the PDB ID 3LEL25. The nucleosome was surrounded by a water cylinder of radius of 17 nm and length of 7.2 nm. Sodium and chlorine ions were added to the solution and the whole system was electrically neutral. A nucleosome has a roughly disk-like shape and the ion's path was chosen to be parallel to the axis of the disk. Periodic boundary conditions were applied along the z-axis of the water cylinder. The repulsive boundary condition was applied on the cylinder's xy plane during equilibration of the system. After the optimisation of the system using a conjugate gradient algorithm the system was equilibrated for 50 ps at 310 K using Langevin thermostat with a damping constant equal to 5 ps−1. All the MD simulations presented in this work were conducted using NAMD software package15 and the CHARMM2216 force field. Water molecules were simulated using the TIP3 model16. For more detail of these simulations please see the supplemental material.
For each value of LET we have conducted five independent simulations in order to acquire higher statistics and have recorded the potential energy in each bond every fs of the simulations. Due to the vibrations of covalent bonds, the potential energy oscillates with a period of ~ 10 fs (half of a period of covalent bond vibrations). We assume that the event of bond breakage may occur only when the bond is under stress, i.e., in the vicinity of the moments at which the dependence of potential energy on time reaches a local maximum. The energies (for the selected bonds) at all such moments within a chosen period of time are recorded in our simulations. The total number of energy records Nr corresponding to potential breaks of the chosen covalent bonds within a given time can be approximately estimated by twice the number of vibration periods of the covalently bonded atoms within this time multiplied by the number of bonds.
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Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Walter Greiner for fruitful discussions, Bradley Roth who critically read the manuscript and the support of European COST Action MP1002 “Nano-scale insights in ion beam cancer therapy.” A.V.Y. thanks Stiftung Polytechnische Gesellschaft Frankfurt am Main for financial support and acknowledges the Center for Scientific Computing (CSC) of the Goethe University Frankfurt for providing with computer facilities.
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The concept, idea and the text were mainly designed by E.S. and A.V.S., while the M.D. simulations and figures were carried out and prepared by A.V.Y. The analysis of the results of the simulations were performed by all three authors.
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Schok wave's interaction with nucleosome
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Surdutovich, E., Yakubovich, A. & Solov'yov, A. Biodamage via shock waves initiated by irradiation with ions. Sci Rep 3, 1289 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep01289
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep01289
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