Nanoprobes effective in delivering cancer drugs
December 15th, 2009 - 6:04 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Dec 15 (ANI): Scientists in the U.S. have shown that tiny nanoprobes are effective in delivering cancer drugs more directly to tumour cells and the correct cellular compartments.
Purdue University Professor Joseph Irudayaraj and graduate student Jiji Chen said they’ve determined the nanoprobes, or nanorods, when coated with the breast cancer drug Herceptin, are reaching the endosomes of cells, mimicking the delivery of the drug on its own.
Endosomes perform a sorting function to deliver drugs and other substances to the appropriate locations.
“We have demonstrated the ability to track these nanoparticles in different cellular compartments of live cells and show where they collect quantitatively,” said Irudayaraj.
“Our methods will allow us to calculate the quantities of a drug needed to treat a cancer cell because now we know how these nanoparticles are being distributed to different parts of the cell,” Irudayaraj added.
The nanoprobes, which are about 1,000 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair, are made from gold and magnetic particles.
An MRI machine can track the magnetic portions of the nanoprobes while a more sensitive microscopy process can detect the gold. The nanoprobes were inserted into live human tumour cells during laboratory testing.
Using fluorescent markers to differentiate organelles, or sub-units of cells, Irudayaraj’s group was able to determine the number of nanoprobes accumulating in the endosomes, lysosomes and membranes of those cells.
Cancer treatments often use high drug concentrations that damage healthy cells near a tumour. While Herceptin is attracted to and attaches to the proteins on the surface of breast cancer cells, healthy surrounding cells absorb some of the chemotherapy drugs through normal fluidic intake.
Irudayaraj said targeting only tumour cells with nanoprobes would require less drugs and mitigate the side effects of cancer chemotherapy drugs.
“Each nanoparticle acts like a deliverer of a mail package, or dose, of the drug directly to the appropriate location,” Irudayaraj said.
The results were published early online in the journal ACS Nano. (ANI)
- Novel nanoscopic probes can help locate and directly attack cancer cells - Mar 17, 2009
- 'Wonderdrug' keeps breast cancer away - Feb 25, 2011
- Combo therapy may overcome Herceptin-resistant breast cancer - Mar 14, 2011
- Now, 'Trojan Horse' delivery system to attack cancer cells from inside - Jul 28, 2010
- Magnets help fight prostate cancer - Nov 09, 2011
- New 'nanodrug' can attack breast cancer cells from the inside out - Mar 30, 2011
- Magnetic pulses can burn cancer cells - Dec 06, 2010
- Erectile dysfunction drug could enhance delivery of herceptin to brain tumours - May 08, 2010
- New study paves way for better cancer treatment - Feb 05, 2011
- Gene to sabotage breast cancer cells - Feb 28, 2011
- Super vaccine could knock out 70 percent of cancers - Dec 13, 2011
- Silencing 'hedgehog' molecule halts cancer - Jun 06, 2011
- 'Breast on-a-chip' to help experts in cancer research - Jan 25, 2011
- Cancer cells can be 'burned up' using magnetic pulses - Dec 06, 2010
- Light sensitive drugs to target cancer - Jun 05, 2011
Tags: breast cancer, breast cancer cells, breast cancer drug, cancer cell, cancer chemotherapy drugs, cancer drug herceptin, cancer drugs, cancer treatments, cellular compartments, drug concentrations, endosomes, herceptin, jiji, lysosomes, magnetic particles, mri machine, nanoparticle, nanoparticles, professor joseph, purdue university professor