On the Primary Water Radicals' Production in the Presence of Gold Nanoparticles: Electron Pulse Radiolysis Study.
Viacheslav ShcherbakovSergey A DenisovMehran MostafaviPublished in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
Gold nanoparticles are known to cause a radiosensitizing effect, which is a promising way to improve radiation therapy. However, the radiosensitization mechanism is not yet fully understood. It is currently assumed that gold nanoparticles can influence various physical, chemical, and biological processes. Pulse radiolysis is a powerful tool that can examine one of the proposed effects of gold nanoparticles, such as increased free radical production. In this work, we shed light on the consequence of ionizing radiation interaction with gold nanoparticles by direct measurements of solvated electrons using the pulse radiolysis technique. We found that at a therapeutically relevant gold concentration (<3 mM atomic gold, <600 μg × cm-3), the presence of gold nanoparticles in solution does not induce higher primary radicals' formation. This result indicates that energy absorption by gold nanoparticles and related effects such as higher ionization of surrounding media and •OH radicals overproduction are not the reason for the radiosensitizing effect reported in the literature.