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strokes of the rich and famous and remote-controlled
drug delivery systems of the future have been given
the golden treatment in a new technology being developed
at the University of Melbourne.
The same technology, which
involves miniscule gold particles only nanometres
in size, has been used to create gold ink and to develop
intelligent delivery systems that may have potential
as drug carriers.
The research is being conducted
by Federation Fellow Professor Frank Caruso, from
the Centre for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology at the
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering,
and his research team in collaboration with Dr Trevor
Smith from the School of Chemistry.
To develop the intelligent
delivery systems, the researchers lined the walls
of microscopic polymer ‘delivery-vehicle’ particles
with gold nanoparticles.
Because laser light is absorbed
by the gold nanoparticles, they found that by simply
shining a laser on loaded delivery vehicles (i.e.
particles filled with various contents, such as an
enzyme or drug), the walls could be opened and the
contents released.
The research was recently published
in the journal Advanced Materials.
“By encasing biologically significant
substances, such as drugs, within the gold nanoparticle-shelled
delivery vehicles, release of the active materials
can be remotely controlled by shining a laser on the
gold nanoparticles, which then opens the particle
walls,” Professor Caruso says.
Dr. Benno Radt, a postdoctoral
fellow in Professor Caruso’s team who is working on
developing the delivery systems, says “we have already
successfully demonstrated the release of an encapsulated
enzyme, which was achieved on demand with a single
nanosecond laser pulse.
“Inducing release of the delivery
vehicle contents is so fast, it is feasible that large
areas of interest could be scanned quickly even with
a relatively low-power, low-cost laser.
“Also, there is no risk that
the laser energy will be significantly absorbed by
biological structures such as bodily organs because
the absorption of the gold-coated delivery vehicles
in the near infrared light region is intentionally
engineered in the wavelength regime for which light
has a maximum penetration depth in tissue.”
Professor Caruso says that
up to now, a common approach for drug release has
been to use changes in the local environment at the
site where drug delivery is needed such as pH, salt,
temperature or enzyme concentrations.
“Our approach is different
in that release can be triggered externally, making
drug release on demand possible.”
Postgraduate student, Ms Alexandra
Angelatos, who is also working on the project says,
“In addition to drugs, these gold-coated vehicles
could be used for the controlled delivery of a wide
range of other substances including genes, pesticides,
cosmetics and food stuffs.”
Professor Caruso, who was previously
at Max Planck Institute (MPI) and his colleague Dr
David Gittins (MPI) successfully devised a technique
to suspend high concentrations of gold nanoparticles
in water without them settling to the bottom or sticking
together (called high colloidal stability). This gold
nanoparticle technology forms the basis for the technique
used in the delivery vehicles.
German-based company, Nanosolutions,
recently purchased the license for the high-concentration
gold nanoparticle technology and have used it to formulate
a gold ink, called GOLD. When a person writes with
the ink the water evaporates, leaving nothing but
a gold script on the page. The ink, which is now available
to buy, can be used in any standard fountain pen and
is, among other things, water and light resistant.
Source : University of Melbourne
http://uninews.unimelb.edu.au/articleid_2020.html
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