Plastic antibody found to work in first tests in living animals
June 10th, 2010 - 5:11 pm ICT by ANIWashington, June 10 (ANI): A plastic antibody has been found to work in the first tests in living animals, scientists report.
The study appears in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
In the report, Kenneth Shea, Yu Hosino, and colleagues refer to previous research in which they developed a method for making plastic nanoparticles, barely 1/50,000th the width of a human hair, that mimic natural antibodies in their ability to latch onto an antigen.
That antigen was melittin, the main toxin in bee venom.
They made the antibody with molecular imprinting, a process similar to leaving a footprint in wet concrete.
The scientists mixed melittin with small molecules called monomers, and then started a chemical reaction that links those building blocks into long chains, and makes them solidify.
When the plastic dots hardened, the researchers leached the poison out.
That left the nanoparticles with tiny toxin-shaped craters.
Their new research, together with Naoto Oku’s group of the University Shizuoka Japan, established that the plastic melittin antibodies worked like natural antibodies.
The scientists gave lab mice lethal injections of melittin, which breaks open and kills cells.
Animals that immediately received an injection of the melittin-targeting plastic antibody showed a significantly higher survival rate than those that did not receive the nanoparticles.
Such nanoparticles could be fabricated for a variety of targets, Shea said.
He added: “This opens the door to serious consideration for these nanoparticles in all applications where antibodies are used.” (ANI)
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Tags: american chemical society, antibody, antigen, bee venom, building blocks, chemical reaction, craters, journal of the american chemical society, lab mice, lethal injections, long chains, molecular imprinting, monomers, natural antibodies, oku, previous research, shizuoka japan, survival rate, wet concrete, width of a human hair