Title: INFN Seminar
1Simulation of Interactions of Radiation with
Biological Systems at the Cellular and DNA Level
http//www.ge.infn.it/geant4/dna/
Activity of
Sponsored by
S. Agostinelli, S. Chauvie,, G. Cosmo, R. Corvó,
N. Crompton D. Emfietzoglou, J.M. Fernandez
Varea, F. Foppiano, S. Garelli, M. Krengli, F.
Marchetto, P. Nieminen, M.G. Pia, V. Rolando, A.
Solano, G. Sanguineti
2Motivations
Relevance
- The concept of dose fails at cellular and DNA
scales - It is desirable to gain an understanding to the
processes at all levels (macroscopic vs.
microscopic)
- Relevance for space astronaut and airline pilot
radiation hazards, biological experiments - Applications in radiotherapy, radiobiology...
- Potential later connection to other than
radiation-induced effects at the cellular and DNA
level
3Programme description
- -based sister activity to
the Geant4 Low-E e.m. Working Group same
rigorous software standards - ESA-sponsored INFN official activity
- Simulation of nano-scale effects of radiation at
the DNA level - First year frame Collection of user requirements
and first prototypes - Various scientific domains involved medical,
biology, genetics, software engineering, high and
low energy physics, space physics - Multiple approaches (RBE parameterisation,
detailed biochemical processes, etc.) can be
implemented with Geant4
4Complexity
Complexity
- It is a complex field
- ongoing active research
- The complexity is increased by the
multi-disciplinary nature of the project - no one masters all the scientific components
(biology, chemistry, physics etc.) - A rigorous approach to the collection of the
requirements is essential - A challenge for problem domain analysis and
software design!
5Collection of User Requirements
Biologicalprocesses
Physicalprocesses
Known, available
Process userrequirements
Unknown, not available
E.g. generation of free radicals in the cell
Chemicalprocesses
Courtesy Nature
User requirements on geometry and visualisation
6Work programme (1)
Geometry requirements
Processes requirements
- Physics and processes requirements
- Heavy ion interactions with molecular structures
- Low-energy electromagnetic interactions
- Low-energy hadronic interactions
- Step size and energy loss requirements secondary
particle production - Other physics and processes required in
biological targets in general, and in the
vicinity of cells and DNA molecules in particular - Consideration of biological processes (such as
DNA repair mechanisms, apoptosis) vs. physical
processes
- Geometry requirements
- Implementation of the structure of the DNA
- Implementation of the composition of the DNA
- Other cellular structures
- Shielding provided by the biological tissue
7Work programme (2)
- General simulation and data
- analysis requirements
- Hierarchy and scalability of the simulation
- Combination of DNA and cellular simulation
results ultimately to macroscopic biological
predictions - Run-time requirements
- Visualisation requirements
- DNA and cellular structures visualisation
particle tracks - Visualisation of biological and chemical
processes visualisation of DNA ruptures - Scaling and zooming
8 -DNA Collaboration
Multi-disciplinary collaboration physicists,
biologists, physicians, computer scientists
9Study of the space radiation environment
Anomalous cosmic rays
Galactic and extra-galactic cosmic rays
Jovian electrons
(Neutrinos)
Solar X-rays
Trapped particles
Induced emission
Solar flare neutrons and g-rays
Solar flare electrons, protons, and heavy ions
10Study of biological effects of radiation
- DNA damage
- Base alteration (Ba) the chemical properties of
an organic base are abnormally modified - Base deletion (Bd) an organic base is removed
from a nucleotide - Sugar alteration (Sa) the chemical properties of
deoxyribose sugar are abnormally modified - Strand break (Sb) the covalent bond between the
deoxyribose sugar unit and the phosphate group is
broken - Mismatched base the natural coupling between
complementary bases A-T and G-C is altered
- Reaction to damage
- Cell cycle arrest
- Apoptosis
- Repair
11Relative Biological Effectiveness (RBE)
- Different types of ionising radiation have
different effects on cells - High LET radiation (ions, neutrons and low energy
protons) has a higher efficiency for damaging
cells than low LET radiation - The RBE depends on the processes taking place
(cell death, double strand break, chromosomal
aberration, etc...)
12Effects of low doses
- Ionising radiation accounts for about 3 of all
cancers - High doses of radiation (tens of Gy) all at once
on whole body can be fatal, but spread out over a
period of time and/or limited to a part of the
body may be tolerated with little damage to
healthy tissues - Low doses of radiation may cause no acute
effects, but increased risk of late damage on
various cell populations due to genetic mutations - Epidemiology of radiation-induced cancer
- Atomic bomb survivors
- Occupational exposure
- Patients treated with ionising radiation
13Other fields of application
- Radiotherapy
- Nuclear medicine
- Teletherapy
- Brachytherapy
- Radio-emitting machinery
- Food irradiation
- Doses and effects of radiation
- Modifications of irradiated food
- Similar issues biological experiments on the
International Space Station
14Study of existing Monte Carlo codes
- Continuous-slowing-down (CSD) scheme
- Simplest approach
- Condensed-random-walk scheme class I codes
- Condensed-random-walk scheme class II codes
- Event-by-event scheme class III codes
- Gas-phase approximation
- Condensed-water medium
- Biopolymer-specific
15Requirements engineering
- 73 of projects are canceled or fail to meet
expectations due to poor requirements definition
and analysis - (The Standish Group, The Chaos Report 1995)
- The requirements process includes the following
activities - Requirements Elicitation
- Requirements Analysis
- Requirements Specification
- Requirements Validation
- Requirements Management
- Requirements engineering can be defined as the
systematic process of developing requirements
through an iterative cooperative process of - analysing the problem
- documenting the resulting observations
- checking the accuracy of the understanding gained
16Requirements
- Requirements are the quantifiable and verifiable
- behaviours that a system must possess
- constraints that a system must work within
Collection, specification and analysis
URD
- Requirements are subject to evolution in the
lifetime of a software project! - ? ability to cope with the evolution of the
requirements
17Capture of user requirements
- Followed PSS-05 recommendations
- Wide agreement should be established through
interviews and surveys - UR should be clarified through criticism and
experience of existing software and prototypes - Knowledge and experience of the potential
development organizations should be used to help
decide on implementation feasibility and build
prototypes
18Methods for User Requirements capture
- Interviews and surveys
- Useful to ensure that UR are complete and there
is wide agreement - Use cases and scenarios
- Thinking systematically in a variety of
situations - Studies of existing software
- Good or bad features of existing software can
identify requirements for the new software - Prototyping
- Useful especially if requirements are unclear or
incomplete - The prototype is based on tentative requirements,
then explore what is really wanted
19Problems in Requirements Elicitation
- Users may know what they want, but are unable to
articulate the requirements - Users may not know what is technologically
capable and may not consider what is possible - Users may have reasons for not wanting to
communicate the requirements - Users and developers sometimes do not speak the
same language - No single user has all the answers, the
requirements come from many sources
20The URD
Physical processes Chemical processes Biochemical
processes Geometry Materials Particles Visualisati
on Analysis Interface to other components
Capability and constraint requirements
21Prototyping
5.3 MeV alpha particle in a cylindrical volume
inside cell nucleus. The inner cylinder has a
radius of 50 nm.
22Publication
draft
The outcome of the first phase of the activity
will be published in an INFN report(summer
2001) It will contain the URD too
23Future
- The exploratory phase of the project has
generated a wide scientific interest - The current body of knowledge is already adequate
for a first functional product - Well worth continuing the activity
- A spiral software process is mandatory in such a
complex field - Incremental and iterative phases of
analysisdesign, implementation, testing - There will certainly be iterations in the
requirements too - The continuation depends on the availability of
financial resources
24http//srhp.jsc.nasa.gov/