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Immunological Effects of Cold Atmospheric Plasma-Treated Cells in Comparison with Those of Cells Treated with Lactaptin-Based Anticancer Drugs. / Troitskaya, Olga; Novak, Diana; Varlamov, Mikhail et al.

In: Biophysica, Vol. 2, No. 3, 09.2022, p. 266-280.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Troitskaya, O, Novak, D, Varlamov, M, Biryukov, M, Nushtaeva, A, Kochneva, G, Zakrevsky, D, Schweigert, I, Richter, V & Koval, O 2022, 'Immunological Effects of Cold Atmospheric Plasma-Treated Cells in Comparison with Those of Cells Treated with Lactaptin-Based Anticancer Drugs', Biophysica, vol. 2, no. 3, pp. 266-280. https://doi.org/10.3390/biophysica2030025

APA

Troitskaya, O., Novak, D., Varlamov, M., Biryukov, M., Nushtaeva, A., Kochneva, G., Zakrevsky, D., Schweigert, I., Richter, V., & Koval, O. (2022). Immunological Effects of Cold Atmospheric Plasma-Treated Cells in Comparison with Those of Cells Treated with Lactaptin-Based Anticancer Drugs. Biophysica, 2(3), 266-280. https://doi.org/10.3390/biophysica2030025

Vancouver

Troitskaya O, Novak D, Varlamov M, Biryukov M, Nushtaeva A, Kochneva G et al. Immunological Effects of Cold Atmospheric Plasma-Treated Cells in Comparison with Those of Cells Treated with Lactaptin-Based Anticancer Drugs. Biophysica. 2022 Sept;2(3):266-280. doi: 10.3390/biophysica2030025

Author

Troitskaya, Olga ; Novak, Diana ; Varlamov, Mikhail et al. / Immunological Effects of Cold Atmospheric Plasma-Treated Cells in Comparison with Those of Cells Treated with Lactaptin-Based Anticancer Drugs. In: Biophysica. 2022 ; Vol. 2, No. 3. pp. 266-280.

BibTeX

@article{502dfd47f3a1440a80d75712b1f48795,
title = "Immunological Effects of Cold Atmospheric Plasma-Treated Cells in Comparison with Those of Cells Treated with Lactaptin-Based Anticancer Drugs",
abstract = "The ability of dying cancer cells to induce an anticancer immune response can increase the effectiveness of anticancer therapies, and such type of death is termed immunogenic cell death (ICD). Cells can die along the ICD pathway when exposed not only to chemo- and immunotherapeutics, but also to various types of radiation, such as ionizing radiation and cold atmospheric plasma jets (CAP). We have previously shown that CAP, lactaptin, and a recombinant vaccinia virus encoding lactaptin induce in vitro molecular changes typical of ICD in cancer cells. In the current work, we treated MX-7 rhabdomyosarcoma cells with CAP and lactaptin-based anticancer drugs and evaluated the immunological effects of the treated cells. We showed that dendritic cells (DCs) captured cells treated with various ICD inducers with different efficiency. CAP-treated cells were weakly potent in inducing the maturation of DCs according to MHC II externalization. Moreover, CAP-treated cells were worse in the stimulation of IFN-α release in vitro and were poorly captured by spleen DCs in vivo. Under the irradiation conditions used, CAP was not capable of activating a significant immunological anti-tumor effect in vivo. It is possible that modifications of the CAP irradiation regimen will enhance the activation of the immune system.",
keywords = "cold plasma jet, dendritic cells, immunogenic cell death, interferon",
author = "Olga Troitskaya and Diana Novak and Mikhail Varlamov and Mikhail Biryukov and Anna Nushtaeva and Galina Kochneva and Dmitriy Zakrevsky and Irina Schweigert and Vladimir Richter and Olga Koval",
note = "The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from Russian Science Foundation grant # 19–19–00255-П (CAP experiments), Russian State-Funded Budget Project, grant number 121030200173-6 (cell culture works).",
year = "2022",
month = sep,
doi = "10.3390/biophysica2030025",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
pages = "266--280",
journal = "Biophysica",
issn = "2673-4125",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Immunological Effects of Cold Atmospheric Plasma-Treated Cells in Comparison with Those of Cells Treated with Lactaptin-Based Anticancer Drugs

AU - Troitskaya, Olga

AU - Novak, Diana

AU - Varlamov, Mikhail

AU - Biryukov, Mikhail

AU - Nushtaeva, Anna

AU - Kochneva, Galina

AU - Zakrevsky, Dmitriy

AU - Schweigert, Irina

AU - Richter, Vladimir

AU - Koval, Olga

N1 - The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from Russian Science Foundation grant # 19–19–00255-П (CAP experiments), Russian State-Funded Budget Project, grant number 121030200173-6 (cell culture works).

PY - 2022/9

Y1 - 2022/9

N2 - The ability of dying cancer cells to induce an anticancer immune response can increase the effectiveness of anticancer therapies, and such type of death is termed immunogenic cell death (ICD). Cells can die along the ICD pathway when exposed not only to chemo- and immunotherapeutics, but also to various types of radiation, such as ionizing radiation and cold atmospheric plasma jets (CAP). We have previously shown that CAP, lactaptin, and a recombinant vaccinia virus encoding lactaptin induce in vitro molecular changes typical of ICD in cancer cells. In the current work, we treated MX-7 rhabdomyosarcoma cells with CAP and lactaptin-based anticancer drugs and evaluated the immunological effects of the treated cells. We showed that dendritic cells (DCs) captured cells treated with various ICD inducers with different efficiency. CAP-treated cells were weakly potent in inducing the maturation of DCs according to MHC II externalization. Moreover, CAP-treated cells were worse in the stimulation of IFN-α release in vitro and were poorly captured by spleen DCs in vivo. Under the irradiation conditions used, CAP was not capable of activating a significant immunological anti-tumor effect in vivo. It is possible that modifications of the CAP irradiation regimen will enhance the activation of the immune system.

AB - The ability of dying cancer cells to induce an anticancer immune response can increase the effectiveness of anticancer therapies, and such type of death is termed immunogenic cell death (ICD). Cells can die along the ICD pathway when exposed not only to chemo- and immunotherapeutics, but also to various types of radiation, such as ionizing radiation and cold atmospheric plasma jets (CAP). We have previously shown that CAP, lactaptin, and a recombinant vaccinia virus encoding lactaptin induce in vitro molecular changes typical of ICD in cancer cells. In the current work, we treated MX-7 rhabdomyosarcoma cells with CAP and lactaptin-based anticancer drugs and evaluated the immunological effects of the treated cells. We showed that dendritic cells (DCs) captured cells treated with various ICD inducers with different efficiency. CAP-treated cells were weakly potent in inducing the maturation of DCs according to MHC II externalization. Moreover, CAP-treated cells were worse in the stimulation of IFN-α release in vitro and were poorly captured by spleen DCs in vivo. Under the irradiation conditions used, CAP was not capable of activating a significant immunological anti-tumor effect in vivo. It is possible that modifications of the CAP irradiation regimen will enhance the activation of the immune system.

KW - cold plasma jet

KW - dendritic cells

KW - immunogenic cell death

KW - interferon

UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85146797843&origin=inward&txGid=b48fea735b2c137f453df8863c89fd37

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/d6ab70ef-2121-3cf3-9da7-3cb4e88d0ec9/

U2 - 10.3390/biophysica2030025

DO - 10.3390/biophysica2030025

M3 - Article

VL - 2

SP - 266

EP - 280

JO - Biophysica

JF - Biophysica

SN - 2673-4125

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 59347041