Ligand Shell Thickness of PEGylated Gold Nanoparticles Controls Cellular Uptake and Radiation Enhancement

11 December 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The drive to improve the safety and efficacy of radiotherapies for cancers has prompted the development of nanomaterials that can locally amplify the radiation dose at a tumor without damaging the surrounding healthy tissue. Gold nanoparticles (Au NPs), in particular, exhibit promising radiosensitizing properties under kilovolt X-ray exposure, although the precise mechanism behind this enhancement is not fully understood. While most studies recognize the involvement of factors such as core composition, size, shape, and ligand chemistry in the effectiveness of Au NPs for radiation-induced cancer treatment, there is a scarcity of direct assessments that connect the photophysical properties of the nanomaterial with the observed cellular or biological outcomes. Despite previous evidence of low energy electron (LEE) emission from Au NPs and their potential to initiate biological damage, to our knowledge, no studies directly correlate the LEE emission with radiation-induced cell death. In this study we assessed Au NPs functionalized with polyethylene glycol (PEG) ligands of varying molecular weights and lengths (1, 5, and 20 kDa PEG) as potential radiosensitizers of A549 lung cancer cells using kilovolt X- ray source potentials (33–130 kVp). We assessed NP internalization using mass cytometry, radiation dose enhancement using clonogenic survival assays, and LEE emission using a novel retarding field analyzer. Results reveal a statistically significant difference in cellular uptake and radiation dose enhancement for 5 kDa PEG-Au NPs compared to formulations using 1 and 20 kDa PEG, while analysis of LEE emission spectra demonstrated that differences in the length of the PEG ligand did not cause statistically significant attenuation of LEE flux. Consequently, we inferred that increased cellular uptake of NPs to be the cause for the observed enhancement in radiosensitivity for 5 kDa PEGylated Au NPs. The approach used in this study establishes a more complete workflow for designing and characterizing the performance of nanomaterial radiosensitizers, allowing for quantification of LEEs and cellular uptake and ultimately correlation with localized dose enhancement that leads to cell death.

Keywords

radiobiology
radiotherepeutics
gold nanoparticles
mass cytometry
cell penetration
low energy electrons

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Materials and methods. Characterization of PEG-Au NPs, metabolic effects of PEG-AU NPs on A549 cells. Mass cytometry gating scheme and internalization of PEG-Au NP formulations in A549 cells. Correlation of percent area and seeding density of A549 cells, colony analysis using ImageJ plug in, RER for 5 kDa PEG-Au NPs. Schematic of retarding field analyzer for low energy electron emission measurements, converting raw LEEs to LEE emission spectra.
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