Abstract

Water-filtered infrared-A (wIRA) radiation has been described as supportive for tissue regeneration. We sought to investigate in detail the wIRA effect at different temperatures in 3T3 fibroblasts that were treated with glyoxal to induce formation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs). Nonirradiated and nonglyoxal-treated cells served as controls. Experiments were carried out over a range of 37–45C with exact temperature monitoring to distinguish between temperature and wIRA effects. Metabolic activity was assessed by resazurin assay. Mitochondrial membrane potential was assessed by JC-1 vital staining. Apoptotic changes were determined by vital staining with annexin V and YO-PRO-1 and determination of subG1 DNA content. Temperature had a dominant effect overriding effects exerted by wIRA or glyoxal treatment. The number of apoptotic cells was significantly higher at 45C, while the percentage of healthy cells was significantly lower at 45C. WIRA irradiation itself or in combination with glyoxal treatment exerted no damaging effects on the fibroblasts at physiological (37–40C) or higher (42–45C) temperatures compared to untreated controls. Temperatures of 45C, which can occur during inappropriate application of infrared irradiation, damage cells even in the absence of wIRA or glyoxal application.

1. Introduction

Water-filtered infrared-A (wIRA) radiation was successfully applied in the clinic, particularly in supporting wound healing and tissue repair, as recently reviewed [1]. WIRA corresponds to a large part of the sun’s heat radiation, which reaches the surface of the Earth after being filtered by water vapor in the atmosphere. Water absorbs IR radiation between 0.75 and 2.4 μm at four discrete wavelengths ranges, two being within infrared-A, one being at the transition from infrared-A to –B, and one being within infrared-B (Figure 1(a), blue boxes). These absorption bands arise from overtones of O–H stretching vibrations of free water molecules. Unfiltered infrared-A can cause an undesired thermal load to exposed tissue. WIRA can artificially be produced by radiators with the radiation of a halogen lamp passing through a cuvette filled with water. Typical wIRA radiators do not emit UV radiation and almost no infrared-B and -C radiations. Figure 1(a) shows the relative intensity of an infrared radiator equipped with a water cuvette as filter. Spectra were ratioed against the spectrum of the radiator without water cuvette. The intense water absorption bands around 0.96 μm, 1.19 μm, between 1.4 μm and 1.55 μm as well as over 1.8 μm are clearly visible. Due to the strong absorption of water, no light between 1.4 and 2.4 μm passed the water cuvette.

Although numerous publications demonstrated the beneficial effects of wIRA irradiation in vivo on injured tissues and in vitro on cell cultures [25], other studies suggested that wIRA irradiation is detrimental to cell cultures [6]. However, these studies did not adequately address the influence of mere temperature increases which are possibly evoked by wIRA and may cause damages in healthy or sublethally stressed cells. Such temperature-evoked damages may add to or even multiply with possible detrimental effects caused by wIRA, for example, when applied inappropriately. In combination with metabolic stress, these potential adverse effects may aggravate any deleterious effects of wIRA and/or temperature rises in cells or tissues. In vitro, metabolic stress can be induced by glyoxal. Glyoxal is an intermediate product in the glycation reaction and causes the formation of altered proteins and DNA damage products, thereby mimicking the situation of stressed cells in diabetic metabolic status. We have previously shown that glyoxal leads to an accelerated production of advanced glycation end products (AGEs), inducing cellular damage and apoptosis [7]. Glyoxal treatment has also been shown to induce senescence in cultured human fibroblasts [8].

In the present study, the effects of wIRA irradiation on healthy fibroblasts or fibroblasts damaged by glyoxal were assessed at different temperatures. Glyoxal exposure was used in order to induce a diabetic metabolic status in the cells. Using a sublethal concentration of glyoxal, which stresses the cells but does not induce cell death, we were able to discriminate between damages evoked by glyoxal, wIRA, temperature, or a combination of these. This study shows that wIRA itself exerts no damaging effect to cells, while the damaging effect of high temperature even overrides that of glyoxal.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Irradiation Setup

A cell incubator was equipped with an external wIRA radiator (Hydrosun 750, Hydrosun, Müllheim, Germany; approximately 600–1400 nm) with optical fibers leading the radiation into the incubator (Figure 1(b)). The radiator was equipped with a filter blocking wavelengths below 780 nm to exclude effects due to visible light. The emitters were placed 4 cm above the cell culture plates. The plates were continuously placed in a thermostatically controlled water bath (6 liter), because water has a better conduction of heat than air. Temperature changes at the bottom of the culture plates were monitored with a temperature sensor which was covered with a 9 mm² piece of aluminum foil without touching it to protect the sensor from wIRA. Irradiation intensity was measured with a radiophotometer (model HBM1, Hydrosun) and set to deliver 30 mW/cm2 at the bottom of the plates, corresponding to clinically applied wIRA radiation of 60–120 mW/cm² [9]. WIRA irradiation was applied under temperature-controlled conditions at 37°C, 40°C, 42°C, and 45°C. Nonirradiated control cells were placed in the same incubator inside a black box to exclude any irradiation under otherwise same conditions (Figure 1(b)). Before and after wIRA irradiation, all cells were incubated in a second cell culture incubator at 37°C (5% CO2, 96% humidity).

2.2. Spectroscopic Measurements

Spectra of the “Hydrosun 750 radiator” were recorded with a conventional Fourier-transform NIR spectrometer (Vector 22/N, Bruker Optik GmbH, Ettlingen, Germany). The radiation was coupled into the spectrometer by using the port for external light sources. All spectra were measured with 4 cm−1 resolution and 100 scans by the deuterated triglycine sulfate (DTGS) detector. The spectrum of the Hydrosun 750 radiator without water cuvette was used as reference. Ratioed spectra were normalized to maximum intensity.

2.3. Temperature Adjustment and Monitoring

24 h before experiments, the radiator was switched on. A culture plate with medium was placed in the water bath and irradiated with wIRA. A sensor was placed at the bottom of a well, and temperature was monitored continuously with a precision of ±0.02°C using an electronic measuring device (ALMEMO Model MA2590-4S, Ahlborn, Germany). The incubator temperature was set so as to factor in wIRA-induced temperature rises, and short-term variabilities were balanced via temperature regulation of the water bath. During experiments, one well of the culture plate was filled with medium but left without cells, and temperatures were monitored accordingly with a small sensor, allowing to differentiate between the effects of heat and wIRA radiation.

2.4. Cell Culture

3T3 cells were cultured in MEM (Minimum Essential Medium Eagle, w/L-glutamine, PAN Biotech, Aidenbach, Germany) supplemented with 5% FCS (fetal calf serum, Biochrom, Berlin, Germany). Cells were seeded at 25,000 cells/cm2 onto 6-well plates 24 h before incubation in glyoxal (see Figure 1(c) for experimental outline). Control cells were incubated either without (normal metabolic state) or with 1 mmol/L glyoxal (Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany) to induce sublethal metabolic stress (diabetic metabolic state). At 3 and 20 hours after glyoxal addition, cells were either irradiated for 1 h with 30 mW/cm2 wIRA (total dose 216 J/cm2 in 24 h), or remained nonirradiated, resulting in four different treatment groups: (1) control without wIRA, (2) control with wIRA, (3) glyoxal without wIRA, and (4) glyoxal with wIRA. During wIRA irradiation, the temperature of the incubator was set to either 37°C, 40°C, 42°C, or 45°C to mimic thermal stress, which might occur during inappropriate clinical application of wIRA. The nonirradiated control cells were likewise exposed to thermal stress.

2.5. Cytotoxicity/Metabolic Activity Assay

Resazurin, which is converted to resorufin by intracellular redox systems, was used to determine metabolic activity of cells. Cells were seeded at 25,000 cells/cm2 onto 96-well plates and treated with glyoxal and/or wIRA under same conditions as described previously (Figure 1(c)). Resazurin (Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany) was added 20 h after addition of glyoxal according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Wells without cells but containing medium and resazurin were used as blanks. Absorbance was measured at 600 nm after 4 h using a plate reader (Model Sunrise, Tecan, Austria). Results are given as difference in absorbance ( ).

2.6. Determination of Mitochondrial Membrane Potential

Cells were seeded at 25,000 cells/cm2 into 8-chamber slides (Labtek coverglass system, Nunc, New York, USA) and treated with glyoxal and/or wIRA under same conditions as described above (Figure 1(c)). Vital staining was performed with JC-1 (20 μg/mL medium; Invitrogen) at 37°C for 20–30 min. Samples were immediately photodocumented using an IX81 fluorescence microscope equipped with an OBS FV2T camera driven by R software (all by Olympus, Hamburg, Germany). Red J-aggregates were recorded using a  nm/  nm filter pair, and green JC-1 monomers were recorded with a  nm/  nm filter pair.

2.7. Determination of Necrosis and Apoptosis

Necrotic and apoptotic cells were detected simultaneously by vital staining with propidium iodide for necrotic cells, and either annexin V or YO-PRO-1 for apoptotic cells. 10,000 cells were analyzed by flow cytometry in a FACS Calibur (Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, USA). The percentages of necrotic and apoptotic cells were calculated with BD CellQuest software.

FITC-conjugated annexin V (ImmunoTools, Friesoythe, Germany) was diluted with binding buffer containing 10 mmol/L HEPES (N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N′-2-ethanesulfonic acid), pH 7.4, 140 mmol/L NaCl, and 2.5 mmol/L CaCl2. Cells were harvested and incubated with 50 μL annexin V solution and 1 μL propidium iodide solution (1 mg/mL in distilled water) for 5 min at room temperature in the dark. Cells were analyzed by flow cytometry using a  nm filter for annexin V and a  nm filter for propidium iodide.

For YO-PRO-1 staining, cells were harvested and incubated in 50 μL PBS with 1% horse serum (Brand, Wertheim, Germany) containing 1 μL YO-PRO-1 (100 μmol/L in DMSO) and 1 μL propidium iodide (1 mg/mL in distilled water) for 20 min at room temperature in the dark. Flow cytometric analysis was performed using a  nm filter for YO-PRO-1 and a  nm filter for propidium iodide.

Apoptotic cells were also detected by nuclear staining of fixed cells to quantify the number of cells with a DNA content less than in G1 phase of the cell cycle (subG1-DNA content). Cells were harvested and fixed in 70% ethanol for 5 min at room temperature. 50 μL phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 1 μL propidium iodide solution (1 mg/mL in distilled water) and 1 μL RNase (> 7 U/μL, Roth, Karlsruhe, Germany) were added to the cells, and samples were incubated for 30 min at room temperature in the dark. Cells with apoptotic nuclei were detected by flow cytometry using a  nm filter, yielding a broad subdiploid peak that could easily be distinguished from the narrow peak of nonapoptotic, diploid cells. The percentage of apoptotic cells was calculated from the histograms.

2.8. Statistical Analysis

All assays were performed at least six times. Values are given as . Statistical analysis was performed by multifactorial univariate analysis of variance (multiway ANOVA) followed by post hoc analysis (Bonferroni-test). Alpha error was adjusted appropriately, and significance was accepted at . Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 17.0 (Chicago, USA).

3. Results

3.1. Metabolic Activity and Mitochondrial Membrane Potential

Metabolic activity was determined using the resazurin conversion assay. Resazurin is a substrate that undergoes a colour change in response to reduction as an indicator of cell metabolic activity. Using this assay, it was observed that the metabolic activity of cells was drastically lower at 45°C with high statistical significance in comparison to the metabolic activity of cells cultured at the other temperatures (Figure 2, bar chart). Metabolic activity of cells was also significantly higher at 42°C than at 37°C.

The vital dye JC-1 permeates cell membranes and selectively accumulates within the mitochondrial matrix. It forms red fluorescent J-aggregates in the presence of a highly negative mitochondrial membrane potential but exists as green monomers under depolarized conditions. Staining live cells with JC-1 revealed that wIRA irradiation, incubation with glyoxal, or both in combination did not have a distinct effect on the cells at 37°C (Figure 2, micrograph panel). When temperature was risen to 45°C, all mitochondria appeared depolarized irrespective of wIRA irradiation or glyoxal treatment, indicating that temperature exerts a dominant effect on mitochondrial membrane potential (Figure 2, micrograph panel).

3.2. Necrosis and Apoptosis

Propidium iodide is membrane impermeant and can only enter cells that have damaged membranes. It accumulates in the nucleus and intercalates with nucleic acid, thereby emitting a characteristic red fluorescence. Hence, vital staining with propidium iodide allows to determine the number of necrotic cells. The number of propidium iodide-positive necrotic cells was significantly higher in cultures that were kept at 45°C than in cultures grown at the other temperatures (Figure 3(a)), confirming results obtained by resazurin conversion and JC-1 staining. Effects of glyoxal and/or wIRA were neglectable compared to that of temperature and did not influence the cells significantly, indicating that temperature exerts a dominant effect.

Phosphatidylserine, which is found exclusively on the inner leaflet of the cell membrane in healthy cells, is translocated to the outer cell membrane leaflet during early stages of apoptosis. Annexin V binds specifically to phosphatidylserine and can be used to determine apoptotic cells by microscopy and flow cytometry. Since Annexin V can also enter necrotic cells and then bind to phosphatidylserine at the inner leaflet, necrotic cells must be discriminated from apoptotic cells by simultaneous labelling with propidium iodide. Figure 3(b) shows the intensity of annexin V fluorescence in propidium iodide-negative cells, which was significantly higher at 45°C than at the other temperatures. This sensitive method further revealed that wIRA did not have a significant effect on the cells.

Nuclear membranes of healthy cells are impermeable to YO-PRO-1, but this dye easily penetrates the nuclear membranes of apoptotic and necrotic cells. It then intercalates with DNA and emits a characteristic green fluorescence, thereby allowing accurate and reproducible quantification of dying cells. Double labelling with YO-PRO-1 and propidium iodide under vital conditions reveals apoptotic cells by green fluorescence and necrotic cells by red and green fluorescence, while viable cells remain nonfluorescent. The percentage of YO-PRO-1-positive, propidium iodide-negative cells was significantly different between cells treated at 37°C and cells treated at 45°C but was not significant compared to the other temperatures. WIRA irradiation significantly decreased the percentage of apoptotic, YO-PRO-1 positive cells irrespective of the temperature, while glyoxal exerted no significant effect (Figure 3(c)).

Labelling of fixed cells with propidium iodide allows to determine the DNA content in each cell in correlation with fluorescence intensity and can be used to perform cell cycle analysis. Apoptotic cells with fragmented DNA can be identified by their subG1-DNA content. The percentage of cells with sub-G1-DNA content was significantly higher at 45°C than at the other temperatures and was significantly lower at 42°C than at 37°C (Figure 3(d)). The effect exerted by temperature was dominant so that, irrespective of temperature, any significant effects of glyoxal and/or wIRA were not observed.

4. Discussion

Infrared-A radiation was shown to accelerate cell and tissue repair in vivo [10], to improve recovery from infected, ischemic, hypoxic, and toxic injury [1115], and to reduce degeneration of the injured optic nerve or traumatic brain injury [16, 17]. Previous studies and reviews reported on successful clinical applications of wIRA radiation in patients with acute and chronic wounds, sclerodermia, local fat reduction, or actinic keratosis [1, 4, 1820]. It was also demonstrated that irradiation with red light (630 nm) may assist in healing of diabetic wounds [11]; hence, it may also be assumed that treatment with wIRA can exert beneficial effects on such impaired wound healing.

The present study was performed to investigate the effects of wIRA on fibroblasts in more detail under normal and metabolically stressed conditions because fibroblasts play a major role in connective tissue and wound repair. Recently, contradictory studies were published which demonstrated either positive effects of wIRA on fibroblasts [21, 22], or showed adverse cellular responses of cultured foreskin fibroblasts to wIRA irradiation which the authors attributed to the infrared radiation [6]. However, neither of the authors differentiated between thermoneutral effects of wIRA and effects induced by temperature changes. An important aim of our study was therefore to differentiate between the effects of wIRA alone and those due to temperature increases that might occur during wIRA irradiation either because of inappropriate application of wIRA or independently of wIRA [21, 23]. In our experiments, temperature was constantly monitored and carefully controlled by using an electronic measuring device with sensors situated at the bottom of the culture plates in the medium in a cell-free well. In addition, the cell culture plates were placed in a large water bath, because water reacts slower to temperature shifts than air and facilitates to hold a constant temperature during irradiation. We used 3T3 mouse fibroblasts, a well-defined and well-characterized fibroblast cell line with a stable growth rate. Some of the fibroblast cultures were stressed by exposure to glyoxal in order to investigate the effects of wIRA radiation on fibroblast cells undergoing oxidative stress similar to that in a diabetic metabolic state.

It could be observed that adverse effects occurred independently of wIRA irradiation and were also seen in nonirradiated cells. The experiments revealed that temperature exerted a dominant effect on the cells and turned out to be the only significantly influencing factor. At physiological temperatures of 37°C and at 40°C, no damaging effects on cultured fibroblasts were observed irrespective of whether wIRA was applied or not. At higher temperatures of 42°C and 45°C, negative cellular responses were observed which occurred in every treatment group, that is, independent of whether wIRA and/or glyoxal were applied or not, and were attributable solely to thermal effects. This is in agreement with the results of a study which showed a beneficial effect of IRA on primary neuronal cell cultures [12], and another study which showed no damaging effects of wIRA on human fibroblasts even at high irradiances as long as appropriate temperatures were not exceeded [23]. Furthermore, it was shown that the surface of human skin exhibits surface temperatures of only 37°–39°C when wIRA is applied appropriately even at high irradiances [5, 24]. In other experiments carried out at high temperatures, deleterious effects were shown to be independent and irrespective of the application of wIRA [23]. The temperature in subcutaneous and other connective tissues does not exceed skin surface temperature under irradiation with wIRA, so that wIRA, when applied at appropriate therapeutic irradiances and doses, does not result in critical temperature increases [2].

We could previously show that glyoxal induces the formation of AGEs, leading to cellular damage and apoptosis in cell cultures [7]. Here, the production of AGEs was induced by glyoxal exposure in order to mimic the conditions of fibroblasts under sublethal oxidative stress similar to that seen in diabetic patients. The effects of the cell stressor glyoxal either alone or in combination with wIRA radiation on cultured fibroblasts at 37°–45°C were investigated with respect to key features of apoptosis. The dominating effect of a high temperature of 45°C was significant compared to other effects that may have been provoked by glyoxal and/or wIRA, or were seen at lower temperatures. In fact, the damage induced by high temperature was seen in glyoxal- and/or wIRA-treated cells as well as in untreated cells at comparable extent. Furthermore, it seemed that the negative effect of high temperature was overriding and thereby masking any effects of glyoxal and of wIRA, as indicated by the lack of significant differences between the four treatment groups at 45°C.

The slight increase in metabolic activity over the range of 37°C to 42°C is in accordance with the general reaction velocity rule valid in chemical and biochemical reactions, whereas at 45°C, the damaging thermal effect dominated. This is also in agreement with the thermal working principles of wIRA. These include a higher metabolic rate and a higher energy production in vitro based on increased temperature as well as an unspecific absorption of electromagnetic radiation by intracellular water, which is significantly lower for wIRA than for IRA (Figure 1(a)) [23, 25]. In vivo, the higher metabolic rate is furthermore based on increased partial pressure of oxygen and higher perfusion of the tissue when exposed to wIRA [2]. WIRA irradiation itself did not exert deleterious effects and did not aggravate any glyoxal-induced damage in in vitro cultured fibroblasts. On the contrary, a positive effect was seen when cells were stained with YO-PRO-1, indicating that wIRA irradiation might reduce the number of apoptotic cells. However, since temperature effects were dominant and overrode any other possible effects in most of the experiments, such positive effects of wIRA remain to be proven in further studies.

Disclosures

The authors indicate no financial interest.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank E. Kuhlisch, Institute of Medical Informatics and Biometry (IMB) of the Faculty of Medicine of the TU Dresden, for support in statistical analysis, and W. Müller, Dr. med. h.c. Erwin Braun Stiftung, and H. Piazena, Medical Photobiology Group, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, for technical support. This study was supported by a grant from the Dr. med. h.c. Erwin Braun Stiftung, Basel, Switzerland.