Monday, March 22, 2010

Smart Nano Particles Target Cancer








It turns out someone else is also working on the nano particle surgery on cancer cells besides the MIT effort already mentioned.

They are trying to be much more precise except I fail to see it as necessary unless they are not cancer cell specific as MIT claims to be.

We really do not need to fuss with lasers if only cancer cells accept the nano particles.

Anyway, there is obviously work underway and getting a particle of gold into a cancer cell has been solved in at least two ways.  Using the gold to heat the cell is clearly easy.  A laser method will be preferred for some instances were partial treatment is called for, perhaps in the case of a large tumor.

Practically speaking, this is a surgical method able to eliminate single cancer cells and it is working, even before we get overly sophisticated.

I now have no trouble predicting the extinction of cancer within the next five or so years.  It is simply too easy to do with this protocol.


Smart Nanoparticles Could Identify, Target And Kill Cancer Cells

by Anne Ju

Cornell Chronicle

Ithaca NY (SPX) Mar 10, 2010


Once taken up by the researchers' gold particles, the cancer cells are destroyed by heat - just a few degrees above normal body temperature - while the surrounding tissue is left unharmed. Such a low-power laser does not have any effect on surrounding cells because that particular wavelength does not heat up cells if they are not loaded up with nanoparticles, the researchers explained.


Another weapon in the arsenal against cancer: Nanoparticles that identify, target and kill specific cancer cells while leaving healthy cells alone.

Led by Carl Batt, the Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Food Science, the researchers synthesized nanoparticles - shaped something like a dumbbell - made of gold sandwiched between two pieces of iron oxide. They then attached antibodies, which target a molecule found only in colorectal cancer cells, to the particles. Once bound, the nanoparticles are engulfed by the cancer cells.

To kill the cells, the researchers use a near-infrared laser, which is a wavelength that doesn't harm normal tissue at the levels used, but the radiation is absorbed by the gold in the nanoparticles. This causes the cancer cells to heat up and die.

"This is a so-called 'smart' therapy," Batt said. "To be a smart therapy, it should be targeted, and it should have some ability to be activated only when it's there and then kills just the cancer cells."

The goal, said lead author and biomedical graduate student Dickson Kirui, is to improve the technology and make it suitable for testing in a human clinical trial. The researchers are now working on a similar experiment targeting prostate cancer cells.

"If, down the line, you could clinically just target the cancer cells, you could then spare the health surrounding cells from being harmed - that is the critical thing," Kirui said.

Gold has potential as a material key to fighting cancer in future smart therapies. It is biocompatible, inert and relatively easy to tweak chemically. By changing the size and shape of the gold particle, Kirui and colleagues can tune them to respond to different wavelengths of energy.

Once taken up by the researchers' gold particles, the cancer cells are destroyed by heat - just a few degrees above normal body temperature - while the surrounding tissue is left unharmed. Such a low-power laser does not have any effect on surrounding cells because that particular wavelength does not heat up cells if they are not loaded up with nanoparticles, the researchers explained.

Using iron oxide - which is basically rust - as the other parts of the particles might one day allow scientists to also track the progress of cancer treatments using magnetic resonance imaging, Kirui said, by taking advantage of the particles' magnetic properties.