A
new system for directing radiation to target cells
has been developed in Melbourne, Australia. The new
targeting system has the potential to specifically
destroy cancer cells with minimal damage to healthy
tissues.
Tom Karagiannis is a research officer from the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre
where the system was devised. Tom has been selected for Fresh Science, a national
competition where early-career researchers present their work to the public
for the first time.
One of the Fresh Scientists will win a trip to the UK courtesy of the British
Council and present their work at the Royal Institution.
The new cancer targeting concept, for which an international patent is pending,
uses a special class of radioactive atoms for which the radiation damage is
confined to the molecules immediately adjacent to the radioactive atom.
The cell-killing effect is maximised by directing the radiation to the genetic
material (DNA) of the target cell, with little effect on neighbouring cells.
“We expect that our targeting system will be particularly useful for small clusters
of cancer cells, such as those that spread throughout the body when a cancer
becomes more advanced,” says Dr Karagiannis.
Conventional cancer therapies such as surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy
have resulted in a steady decline in cancer mortality rates over the years.
Only chemotherapy has the potential to be effective when the cancer has spread
throughout the body, but often it is not effective.
Latest figures from the World Health Organization show that about 50 percent
of cancer patients still die in developed countries and about 80 percent die
in developing countries.
A unique feature of the cancer targeting system is the highly focussed damage
caused by the radioactive isotopes used - most of the radiation damage is within
a distance of only a few millionths of a millimetre. This means they can kill
cancer cells without causing significant damage to normal cells.
The new technology combines knowledge from a wide range of scientific disciplines,
including radiation biology, chemistry and immunology, Dr Karagiannis says.
The key ingredient is a complex composite drug, made by attaching the radioactive
atom to a DNA-binding molecule, which in turn is linked to a cancer-targeting
protein such as an antibody.
“Our radiolabelled DNA-binding drug alone provided a very efficient ‘molecular
bomb' for destroying cells,” says Dr Karagiannis. “But it could not discriminate
between cancer cells and healthy cells.”
To make a ‘smarter' drug, researchers took advantage of the fact that many
cancer cells express high levels of certain proteins on their cell surface.
Antibodies that bind specifically to these surface proteins were used as vehicles
to target the lethal damage to cancer cells.
“Our strategy builds on the growing interest in antibodies as cancer therapeutics,” says
Associate Professor Roger Martin, Tom's supervisor who has been working on the
project concept for the past three decades.
“There are a currently only a handful of such anticancer-antibodies that have
been approved for therapy and many others that are in clinical trials.”
Proof-of-principle studies with the new targeting system have yielded very
promising results with cell cultures, but a commercial partner is required
for further development.
Notes :
Fresh Science is a national competition
held in Australia and supported by the Federal and
state governments. The winner receives a study tour
to the UK courtesy of the British Council and they
will present at the Royal Institution.
Contact: Dr Tom Karagiannis on +61 417 591 950 or tom.karagiannis@petermac.org
Url : http://www.scienceinpublic.com/sciencenow/2005/tomkaragiannis/tomkaragiannis.htm
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