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    Medical gas plasma augments bladder cancer cell toxicity in preclinical models and patient-derived tumor tissues
    (Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 2022) Gelbrich, Nadine; Miebach, Lea; Berner, Julia; Freund, Eric; Saadati, Fariba; Schmidt, Anke; Stope, Matthias; Zimmermann, Uwe; Burchardt, Martin; Bekeschus, Sander
    Introduction: Medical gas plasma therapy has been successfully applied to several types of cancer in preclinical models. First palliative tumor patients suffering from advanced head and neck cancer benefited from this novel therapeutic modality. The gas plasma-induced biological effects of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS) generated in the plasma gas phase result in oxidation-induced lethal damage to tumor cells. Objectives: This study aimed to verify these anti-tumor effects of gas plasma exposure on urinary bladder cancer. Methods: 2D cell culture models, 3D tumor spheroids, 3D vascularized tumors grown on the chicken chorion-allantois-membrane (CAM) in ovo, and patient-derived primary cancer tissue gas plasma-treated ex vivo were used. Results: Gas plasma treatment led to oxidation, growth retardation, motility inhibition, and cell death in 2D and 3D tumor models. A marked decline in tumor growth was also observed in the tumors grown in ovo. In addition, results of gas plasma treatment on primary urothelial carcinoma tissues ex vivo highlighted the selective tumor-toxic effects as non-malignant tissue exposed to gas plasma was less affected. Whole-transcriptome gene expression analysis revealed downregulation of tumor-promoting fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3) accompanied by upregulation of apoptosis-inducing factor 2 (AIFm2), which plays a central role in caspase-independent cell death signaling. Conclusion: Gas plasma treatment induced cytotoxicity in patient-derived cancer tissue and slowed tumor growth in an organoid model of urinary bladder carcinoma, along with less severe effects in non-malignant tissues. Studies on the potential clinical benefits of this local and safe ROS therapy are awaited.
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    Cold physical plasma-induced oxidation of cysteine yields reactive sulfur species (RSS)
    (Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 2019) Bruno, Giuliana; Heusler, Thea; Lackmann, Jan-Wilm; Woedtke, Thomas von; Weltmann, Klaus-Dieter; Wende, Kristian
    Purpose: Studying plasma liquid chemistry can reveal insights into their biomedical effects, i.e. to understand the direct and indirect processes triggered by the treatment in a model or clinical application. Due to the reactivity of the sulfur atom, thiols are potential targets for plasma- derived reactive species. Being crucial for protein function and redox signaling pathways, their controllable modification would allow expanding the application range. Additionally, models to control and standardize CAP sources are desired tools for plasma source design. Methods: Cysteine, a ubiquitous amino acid, was used as a tracer compound to scavenge the reactive species produced by an argon plasma jet (kINPen). The resulting product pattern was identified via high-resolution mass spectrometry. The Ellman´s assay was used to screen CAP derived thiol consumption, and long-lived species deposition (hydrogen peroxide, nitrite, nitrate) was monitored in relation to the presence of cysteine. Results: The intensity of cysteine oxidation increased with treatment time and availability of oxygen in the feed gas. A range of products from cysteine was identified, in part indicative for certain treatment conditions. Several non-stable products occur transiently during the plasma treatment. Bioactive reactive sulfur species (RSS) have been found for mild treatment conditions, such as cysteine sulfoxides and cysteine-S-sulfonate. Considering the number of cysteine molecules in the boundary layer and the achieved oxidation state, short-lived species dominate in cysteine conversion. In addition, a boundary layer depletion of the tracer was observed. Conclusion: Translating these data into the in-vivo application, strong direct oxidation of protein thiol groups with subsequent changes in protein biochemistry must be considered. Plasma-derived RSS may in part contribute to the observed biomedical effects of CAP. Care must be taken to control the discharge parameter tightly as chemical dynamics at or in the liquid are subject to change easily. © 2019