“dsbandrepair” – An updated Geant4-DNA simulation tool for evaluating the radiation-induced DNA damage and its repair

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

Le Tuan Anh (IRSN Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire)

Tran Ngoc Hoang (University of Bordeaux)

Yann Thibaut (IRSN Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire)

Konstantinos Chatzipapas (University of Brest/INSERM/LaTIM)

Dousatsu Sakata (Osaka University)

Sébastien Incerti (University of Bordeaux)

Carmen Villagrasa (IRSN Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire)

Yann Perrot (IRSN Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire)

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DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmp.2024.103422
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Journal title
Physica Medica
Volume number
124
Article number
103422
Downloads counter
161

Abstract

Purpose: Interdisciplinary scientific communities have shown large interest to achieve a mechanistic description of radiation-induced biological damage, aiming to predict biological results produced by different radiation quality exposures. Monte Carlo track-structure simulations are suitable and reliable for the study of early DNA damage induction used as input for assessing DNA damage. This study presents the most recent improvements of a Geant4-DNA simulation tool named “dsbandrepair”. Methods: “dsbandrepair” is a Monte Carlo simulation tool based on a previous code (FullSim) that estimates the induction of early DNA single-strand breaks (SSBs) and double-strand breaks (DSBs). It uses DNA geometries generated by the DNAFabric computational tool for simulating the induction of early single-strand breaks (SSBs) and double-strand breaks (DSBs). Moreover, the new tool includes some published radiobiological models for survival fraction and un-rejoined DSB. Its application for a human fibroblast cell and human umbilical vein endothelial cell containing both heterochromatin and euchromatin was conducted. In addition, this new version offers the possibility of using the new IRT-syn method for computing the chemical stage. Results: The direct and indirect strand breaks, SSBs, DSBs, and damage complexity obtained in this work are equivalent to those obtained with the previously published simulation tool when using the same configuration in the physical and chemical stages. Simulation results on survival fraction and un-rejoined DSB are in reasonable agreement with experimental data. Conclusions: “dsbandrepair” is a tool for simulating DNA damage and repair, benchmarked against experimental data. It has been released as an advanced example in Geant4.11.2.

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