It turns out, however, that Suresh's expertise in
nanotechnology is quite applicable to biology and
medicine. With colleagues in engineering, science
and medicine at MIT, the National University of Singapore
(NUS) and the universities of Heidelberg and Ulm in
Germany, he has adapted state-of-the-art tools for
the study of the mechanical properties of materials
to the study of living cells.
Now, in the January 2005 issue of Acta Biomaterialia,
the researchers report the most complete and quantitative
characterization yet of how a healthy human blood
cell changes its shape, or deforms, upon being invaded
by the malaria-inducing parasite Plasmodium falciparum.
In the same article, the researchers show how the
deformation of human pancreatic cancer cells in response
to certain naturally occurring biomolecules may affect
the metastasis of that disease. Ultimately, the work
could lead to better treatments for these and other
diseases.
Suresh's coauthors are graduate student John P. Mills
and research scientist Ming Dao of MIT's Department
of Materials Science and Engineering, Professor Joachim
Spatz and Alexandre Micoulet of the University of
Heidelberg, Professor C. T. Lim of NUS, and Professor
Thomas Seufferlein and Mark Beil of the University
of Ulm.
Malaria and the cell
Healthy red blood cells regularly contort from circular
disks to slender "bullets" to move through
the tiniest blood vessels. Parasite-infected cells
can lose their ability to do so because of reduced
deformability and because they tend to stick more
easily to one another and to blood vessel walls.
"It has been a great challenge to directly measure
the cells' changing mechanical properties continuously
as the parasite matures inside the cell," said
Suresh, the Ford Professor of Engineering, who also
holds appointments in MIT's Department of Mechanical
Engineering and Biological Engineering Division.
In the Acta Biomaterialia paper, the researchers
report doing just that. "We provide the first
quantitative force versus displacement results on
how the deformability of the red blood cell changes
progressively in response to the full development
of the P. falciparum parasite inside the cell,"
Suresh said.
"Such information at the molecular level is
vital to gain insights into the pathogenesis of malaria,
and potentially offers the opportunity to develop
better drugs," Suresh added. Precise measurements
of infected cells' response to mechanical forces could
also help doctors understand how different strains
of the parasite influence the functioning of organs
such as the spleen.
Optical tweezers
Key to the work is a known tool: optical tweezers.
With this tool, silica spheres or beads are attached
to opposite sides of a red blood cell, and a laser
beam is aimed at one bead. Under the right conditions,
the laser "traps" the bead, so that the
trapped bead can be pulled, stretching or deforming
the cell.
While others have also used optical tweezers to study
the deformation of cells, the forces they've been
able to apply are far less than those needed to induce
the deformation that cells would experience in the
body. The forces obtained by the MIT-led researchers
are several times larger, and their technique offers
considerably greater flexibility to mechanically manipulate
cells than other methods. "This really gives
a level of strain for the red blood cell that is similar
to what that cell experiences as it moves through
tiny blood vessels," said Suresh.
"We then extract the properties of a healthy
red blood cell and a parasite-invaded cell from a
combination of experiments and 3D computer modeling
at the full-cell and molecular levels," he continued.
His team, along with NUS microbiologist Kevin Tan
and NUS graduate student Qie Lan, is also collaborating
with the Institut Pasteur in Paris to explore how
specific proteins transported from the surface of
parasite to the cell contribute to changes in cell
mechanical properties and stickiness.
Malaria kills some two to three million people every
year. "I'm hopeful that this work will provide
a deeper scientific understanding of how malaria affects
cells by bringing cutting-edge engineering methodology
to study medical problems," Suresh said.