Researchers
at Rice University in Texas have developed a new approach
to fighting cancer, based on nanoscale particles that
can both detect and destroy cancerous cells. The report
appears in the April 13 issue of the American Chemical
Society's journal Nano Letters. ACS is the world's
largest scientific society.
Current molecular imaging approaches
only detect the cancer but don't offer a method of
treatment, according to the study's lead authors,
Rebekah Drezek, Ph.D., and Jennifer West, Ph.D., both
professors in the Department of Bioengineering at
Rice.
"You can look for a molecular
marker that may indicate a significant clinical problem,
but you can't do anything about it [just through imaging],"
says Drezek. "We don't want to simply find the
cancerous cells. We would like to locate the cells,
be able to make a rational choice about whether they
need to be destroyed and, if so, proceed immediately
to treatment."
To this end, Drezek and West
collaborated to develop a new imaging and treatment
method based on metal "nanoshells" - tiny
spheres of silica coated with a thin layer of gold.
Nanoshells were invented by electrical engineer Naomi
Halas, Ph.D., also of Rice University. Because these
spheres are constructed on the nanometer scale (one
billionth of a meter, the range where molecular interactions
take place), they exhibit unique size-dependent behavior,
such as tunable optical properties. This allows researchers
to design particles that scatter and absorb light
at particular wavelengths.
The scattering of light provides
the optical signal used to detect the cancer cells,
which then "light up" when they come into
contact with the nanoshells. In this study, the researchers
designed the nanoshells to look for breast cancer
biomarkers on the surface of the cancer cells. The
technique can be readily extended to target other
types of cancer or disease processes that have known
surface markers.
The additional ability of the
particles to absorb light is used to generate heat,
which then destroys the cancer cells. "Nanoshells
are very unique in that we can engineer the particles
so that both the optical scattering and absorption
peaks occur in the near-infrared (NIR) spectral region
where light penetration through tissue is highest,"
Drezek says. The NIR absorption also makes destruction
of the targeted cells less invasive for patients because
it uses a light source from outside the body that
passes harmlessly through normal tissue and only heats
the tissue containing nanoshells.
The new approach has some significant
advantages over other alternatives that are under
development, according to Drezek. For instance, optical
imaging is much faster and less expensive than other
medical imaging techniques. Gold nanoparticles are
also more biocompatible than other types of optically
active nanoparticles, such as quantum dots.
Gold is a chemically inert
material that is well-known for its biocompatibility,
which is why it has found use in a variety of medical
applications in the past. "There is a prior history
of the use of gold inside the body that makes the
safety issues somewhat easier to address," Drezek
says. Of course, any new technology requires extensive
safety assessment before coming to market, but initial
results from nanoshells testing are promising. Nanoshells
developed for therapeutic applications have already
been evaluated by Nanospectra Biosciences Inc., the
Houston-based company that is commercializing the
technology, with no ill effects found, according to
Drezek.
Drezek and West have successfully
tested the separate imaging and therapy aspects of
the nanoshells in animals and are now evaluating the
combined imaging/therapy nanoshells in a mouse tumor
model, which they expect to complete within the next
six months.
The American Chemical Society
is a nonprofit organization, chartered by the U.S.
Congress, with an interdisciplinary membership of
more than 158,000 chemists and chemical engineers.
It publishes numerous scientific journals and databases,
convenes major research conferences and provides educational,
science policy and career programs in chemistry. Its
main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus,
Ohio.
- Jason Gorss
The online version of the
research paper cited above was initially published
March 22, 2005, on the journal's Web site. Journalists
can arrange access to this site by sending an e-mail
to newsroom@acs.org or calling the contact person
for this release.
Contact: Michael Bernstein
202-872-4400
m_bernstein@acs.org
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