Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (25)
- Doctoral Thesis (5)
Has Fulltext
- yes (30)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (30)
Keywords
- plasma medicine (30) (remove)
Institute
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Chirurgie Abt. für Viszeral-, Thorax- und Gefäßchirurgie (8)
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Mund-, Kiefer- und Gesichtschirurgie/Plastische Operationen (7)
- Institut für Hygiene und Umweltmedizin (5)
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Orthopädie und Orthopädische Chirurgie (3)
- Institut für Physik (2)
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Chirurgie Abt. für Unfall- und Wiederherstellungschirurgie (2)
- Institut für Biochemie (1)
- Institut für Immunologie u. Transfusionsmedizin - Abteilung Immunologie (1)
- Institut für Pharmakologie (1)
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Urologie (1)
The loss of skin integrity is inevitable in life. Wound healing is a necessary sequence of events to reconstitute the body’s integrity against potentially harmful environmental agents and restore homeostasis. Attempts to improve cutaneous wound healing are therefore as old as humanity itself. Furthermore, nowadays, targeting defective wound healing is of utmost importance in an aging society with underlying diseases such as diabetes and vascular insufficiencies being on the rise. Because chronic wounds’ etiology and specific traits differ, there is widespread polypragmasia in targeting non-healing conditions. Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS) are an overarching theme accompanying wound healing and its biological stages. ROS are signaling agents generated by phagocytes to inactivate pathogens. Although ROS/RNS’s central role in the biology of wound healing has long been appreciated, it was only until the recent decade that these agents were explicitly used to target defective wound healing using gas plasma technology. Gas plasma is a physical state of matter and is a partially ionized gas operated at body temperature which generates a plethora of ROS/RNS simultaneously in a spatiotemporally controlled manner. Animal models of wound healing have been vital in driving the development of these wound healing-promoting technologies, and this review summarizes the current knowledge and identifies open ends derived from in vivo wound models under gas plasma therapy. While gas plasma-assisted wound healing in humans has become well established in Europe, veterinary medicine is an emerging field with great potential to improve the lives of suffering animals.
On the aqueous phase chemistry of atmospheric-pressure plasma jets for biomedical applications
(2021)
Cold atmospheric-pressure plasmas are candidate biomedical tools proposed for various applications, such as biological decontamination, cancer regression, and promotion of wound healing. Plasmas, which are in the fourth state of matter, can be generated using inert gases (e.g., argon, helium, ambient air) and different source concepts. Together with the applied parameters, the source design defines the chemical-physical characteristics of the resulting plasma, leading in turn to variable biochemical effects on biological matter. The medical effectiveness of cold plasmas has been proven in vitro and in vivo, also in clinical trials for wound healing in patients using two certified plasmas sources, the kINPen MED and the PlasmaDerm. However, molecular mechanisms leading to those effects are unclear. In the same way, it must be studied if the modulation of plasma properties could improve the specificity of biological effects. These findings are needed to define the concept of plasma dose to be optimized in targeting peculiar pathologic conditions. The present thesis consisting of five peer-reviewed publications has investigated these aspects of plasma research.
In the gaseous phase of cold plasmas, various components with biological activity are produced, such as radiation (e.g., vacuum UV, UV) and reactive species (e.g., •O, 1O2, •OH, •NO, •NO2, O3). As most gaseous species are short-lived, liquid compartments surrounding cells and molecular structures could mediate their transformation and/or the production of other aqueous species. For this reason, plasma-induced aqueous chemistry has been mainly investigated in this thesis. The reaction pathways of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in liquid were analyzed by monitoring the oxidative modifications induced on tyrosine and cysteine, which are biological structures essential in cellular protein functioning. Liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry-based strategies have been elaborated to elucidate structural changes and characterize the oxidative pattern occurring on the tracers after treatment with plasmas.
As a first result, it could be shown that the oxidative pattern induced on tyrosine or cysteine variated qualitatively and quantitatively with the applied conditions, reflecting the action of differently produced/deposited species in liquid. Biologically relevant structures were identified and in part quantified (e.g., cystine, sulfonic acid, sulfinic acid, S-sulfonate, S-nitrosocysteine, nitrotyrosine, nitrosotyrosine). By using isotopically labeled oxygen or nitrogen in the gas plasma, or labeled oxygen in the target liquid, the incorporation of gaseous or aqueous species in the tracer’s structures was monitored via mass spectrometry. With this strategy, the reaction mechanisms involving gaseous oxygen and nitrogen species at the liquid interface were clarified, as well as the de novo production of reactive species in liquid. Short-lived gaseous oxygen species such as atomic and singlet oxygen (•O, 1O2), predominantly formed in conditions with oxygen in the plasma gas, were able to modify the cysteine structures in highly oxidized derivatives, such as cysteine sulfonic acid. Due to their half-life, however, their activity occurred mainly at the interface. Vacuum UV radiation and •O also led to the formation in liquid of hydroxyl radicals (•OH) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), due to water photolysis and homolysis. Water-derived species were responsible for the formation of reversible modifications, such as cysteine S-sulfonate, cystine, and cystine sulfoxides. Nitrosative modifications (e.g., S-nitrosocysteine, nitrosotyrosine, nitrotyrosine) could be observed only in conditions with both nitrogen and oxygen in the plasma gas, and further optimization occurred in presence of water molecules in the gas. In this case, the formation and action of peroxynitrite (ONOO-) in generating nitrotyrosine was proven by using a scavenger molecule for ONOO-.
Finally, the cysteine product pattern was applied as a tool to characterize and compare the overall chemistry generated in liquid by different plasma sources and applied parameters. These findings aim to support and contribute to the definition of plasma dose for plasma medicine, through the standardization, control, tuning, and optimization of plasma parameters and plasma liquid chemistry. These results may be applied in the future to improve the specificity and selectivity of the biological effects generated by the described atmospheric-pressure plasma jets.
Molecular Mechanisms of the Efficacy of Cold Atmospheric Pressure Plasma (CAP) in Cancer Treatment
(2020)
The requirements for new technologies to serve as anticancer agents go far beyond their toxicity potential. Novel applications also need to be safe on a molecular and patient level. In a broader sense, this also relates to cancer metastasis and inflammation. In a previous study, the toxicity of an atmospheric pressure argon plasma jet in four human pancreatic cancer cell lines was confirmed and plasma treatment did not promote metastasis in vitro and in ovo. Here, these results are extended by additional types of analysis and new models to validate and define on a molecular level the changes related to metastatic processes in pancreatic cancer cells following plasma treatment in vitro and in ovo. In solid tumors that were grown on the chorion-allantois membrane of fertilized chicken eggs (TUM-CAM), plasma treatment induced modest to profound apoptosis in the tissues. This, however, was not associated with a change in the expression levels of adhesion molecules, as shown using immunofluorescence of ultrathin tissue sections. Culturing of the cells detached from these solid tumors for 6d revealed a similar or smaller total growth area and expression of ZEB1, a transcription factor associated with cancer metastasis, in the plasma-treated pancreatic cancer tissues. Analysis of in vitro and in ovo supernatants of 13 different cytokines and chemokines revealed cell line-specific effects of the plasma treatment but a noticeable increase of, e.g., growth-promoting interleukin 10 was not observed. Moreover, markers of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a metastasis-promoting cellular program, were investigated. Plasma-treated pancreatic cancer cells did not present an EMT-profile. Finally, a realistic 3D tumor spheroid co-culture model with pancreatic stellate cells was employed, and the invasive properties in a gel-like cellular matrix were investigated. Tumor outgrowth and spread was similar or decreased in the plasma conditions. Altogether, these results provide valuable insights into the effect of plasma treatment on metastasis-related properties of cancer cells and did not suggest EMT-promoting effects of this novel cancer therapy.