Icariin has a regulatory effect on steroidogenesis in HaCaT cells, which may provide a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of inflammatory skin disorders.
A biological microbeam for precisely positioned single-ion/single cell irradiation is built in the Institute of Modern Physics in Fudan University, Shanghai, China, based on the tandem accelerator (2 × 3MV) in the laboratory. In this paper, the developing progress of the FUDAN microbeam is reported, including the newly constructed beam line, the microbeam collimator, the ion detection system, and the cell-imaging and targeting systems. Statistical models are proposed for evaluating the spatial resolution and dosage precision of the microbeam. By taking the collimated ions as a Gaussian beam, the spatial resolution can be evaluated by the full width at half maximum of the 2-D Gaussian distribution, which is determined by fitting the proportions of peripheral pits outside specific radii in the pit clusters etched on ion track detectors to a 2-D Gaussian distribution. In the preset hitting of defined ion number, by taking the real delivered number of ions as an independent identically distributed random variable (iidrv), according to the Law of Large Numbers and Central Limit Theorem, the expected value μ and standard deviation σ of the real delivered ion number in a preset N-ion hitting can be determined by approaching the normal distribution of N (μ, σ (2)/n) with the proportions of the mean counts of pits in multiple pit clusters on ion track detectors. By the values of μ, σ and additional assumptions, statistical dosage precision evaluations can be made on the preset hitting. From the linear fit curve of μ(N) and the power function fit curve of σ(N) on different preset ion numbers, characteristic factors k, b, A, p can be extracted for a precision evaluation independent of the specific preset ion number.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.