• DocumentCode
    1265939
  • Title

    From RONS to ROS: Tailoring Plasma Jet Treatment of Skin Cells

  • Author

    Reuter, Stephan ; Tresp, Helena ; Wende, Kristian ; Hammer, Malte U. ; Winter, Jörn ; Masur, Kai ; Schmidt-Bleker, Ansgar ; Weltmann, Klaus-Dieter

  • Author_Institution
    Center for Innovation Competence plasmatis, Leibniz Inst. for Plasma Sci. & Technol. (INP Greifswald e.V., Greifswald, Germany
  • Volume
    40
  • Issue
    11
  • fYear
    2012
  • Firstpage
    2986
  • Lastpage
    2993
  • Abstract
    Finding a solution for air species contamination of atmospheric pressure plasmas in plasma medical treatment is a major task for the new field of plasma medicine. Several approaches use complex climate chambers to control the surrounding atmosphere. In this paper, ambient species are excluded in plasma-human-skin-cell treatment by ensheathing the plasma jet effluent with a shielding gas. Not only does this gas curtain protect the plasma jet effluent from inflow of air species but it also, more importantly, allows controlling the effluent reactive species composition by adjusting the mixture of the shielding gas. In the present investigations, the mixture of nitrogen to oxygen within the gas curtain around an argon atmospheric pressure plasma jet (kinpen) is varied. The resulting reactive plasma components produced in the jet effluent are thus either oxygen or nitrogen dominated. With this gas curtain, the effect of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) on the cell viability of indirectly plasma-treated HaCaT skin cells is studied. This human keratinocyte cell line is an established standard for a skin model system. The cell viability is determined by a fluorometric assay, where metabolically active cells transform nonfluorescent resazurin to the highly fluorescent resorufin. Plasma jet and gas curtain are characterized by numerical flow simulation as well as by optical emission spectroscopy. The generation of nitrite within the used standard cell culture medium serves as a measure for generated RNS. Measurements with the leukodye dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate show that, despite a variation of the shielding gas mixture, the total amount of generated reactive oxygen plus nitrogen species is constant. It is shown that a plasma dominated by RNS disrupts cellular growth less than a ROS-dominated plasma.
  • Keywords
    cellular biophysics; effluents; flow simulation; fluorescence; nitrogen; oxygen; patient treatment; plasma applications; plasma chemistry; plasma jets; skin; N; O; RONS; ROS; air species contamination; atmospheric pressure plasmas; cell viability; climate chambers; effluent reactive species composition; ensheathing; fluorescent resorufin; fluorometric assay; gas mixture; human keratinocyte cell line; indirectly plasma-treated HaCaT skin cells; leukodye dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate; nitrite; nonfluorescent resazurin; numerical flow simulation; optical emission spectroscopy; plasma jet effluent; plasma jet treatment; plasma medical treatment; plasma-human-skin-cell treatment; reactive nitrogen species; reactive oxygen species; reactive plasma components; shielding gas; skin model system; standard cell culture medium; Argon; Liquids; Nitrogen; Plasma measurements; Plasmas; Skin; Standards; Atmospheric pressure plasma jet; gas curtain; plasma liquid interaction; plasma medicine; reactive nitrogen species (RNS); reactive oxygen plus nitrogen species (RONS); reactive oxygen species (ROS); skin cells;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0093-3813
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TPS.2012.2207130
  • Filename
    6269937