Title :
Melanoma Morphology Change & Apoptosis Induced by Multiple Nanosecond Pulsed Electric Fields
Author :
Swanson, R. James ; Chen, Xinhua ; Nuccitelli, Richard ; Beebe, Stephen J. ; Pliquett, Uwe ; Ford, Wentia ; Kolb, Juergen F. ; Zheng, Shusen ; Schoenbach, Karl H.
Author_Institution :
Old Dominion Univ., Norfolk
Abstract :
Our initial in vitro (HL-60 cells) and in vivo (B16-F10 murine) studies showed nanosecond pulsed electric fields (nsPEFs) caused intracellular changes and melanoma involution, respectively. We wanted to describe the morphologic changes in cell ultrastructure and investigate the mechanism for change due to nsPEFs in B16-F10 melanoma tumors in SKH-1 mice. We injected B16-F10 cells into 120 female SKH-1 mice to derive melanoma tumors. After multiple nsPEF treatments (40 kV/cm field strength; 5 ns rise time; 300 ns duration), morphologic changes of melanoma size, shape, tumor nesting pattern, blood vessel structure and cell ultrastructure were observed. Nuclear changes were recorded with light-and transmission electron-microscopy (TEM). Apoptosis in situ was detected by several immunohistochemistry (IHC) methods: (1) terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase biotin-dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL); (2) caspase 3, 6 and 7; and (3) histone H2AX. After multiple nsPEF treatments the melanoma blood supply was disrupted and melanomas shrank an average of 90% within two weeks. TEM showed increased rough endoplasmic reticulum and condensed dark-staining nucleoli; TUNEL presented fluorescent increase. Together these suggest post-treatment apoptotic activity, which was concurrently allied with increased caspase 3, 6 and 7, and histone H2AX fluorescence (DNA damage) after pulsing. Our study shows that blood flow and apoptotic changes play a central role in the biological effects caused by nsPEFs. Therefore nsPEFs may have application potential in cancer therapy, gene regulation and biophysical research by non-invasively disrupting intracellular components and inducing apoptosis in malignant tumors.
Keywords :
DNA; biochemistry; bioelectric phenomena; biological effects of fields; biomolecular effects of radiation; blood vessels; cancer; cellular effects of radiation; electric field effects; fluorescence; haemodynamics; optical microscopy; proteins; skin; transmission electron microscopy; tumours; B16-F10 murine cell; DNA damage; HL-60 cells; TEM; apoptotic activity; biological effects; biotin-dUTP nick end labeling; blood flow; blood vessel structure; cancer therapy; cell ultrastructure; condensed dark-staining nucleoli; female SKH-1 mice; gene regulation; histone H2AX fluorescence; immunohistochemistry method; in vitro study; in vivo study; intracellular changes; intracellular components; light microscopy; malignant tumors; melanoma tumor morphology; multiple nanosecond pulsed electric fields; nuclear changes; rough endoplasmic reticulum; terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase; transmission electron-microscopy; tumor nesting pattern; Blood vessels; Fluorescence; In vitro; In vivo; Malignant tumors; Mice; Morphology; Nanobioscience; Neoplasms; Shape;
Conference_Titel :
Electromagnetics in Advanced Applications, 2007. ICEAA 2007. International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Torino
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0767-5
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0767-5
DOI :
10.1109/ICEAA.2007.4387486