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Nanoprobe technology to throw light on disease

Researchers from Rice University in Houston have devised a system that uses nanoparticles to literally highlight the presence of diseases like cancer and atherosclerosis in cells.

Investigators from Rice University’s Center for Biological and Environmental Nanotechnology (CBEN) have developed a “smart” beacon hundreds of times smaller than a human cell that is programmed to light up only when activated by specific proteases. Altered expression of particular proteases is a common hallmark of cancer, atherosclerosis, and many other diseases.

“The idea is to develop a ‘smart’ nanostructure that is dark in its original state but lights up very brightly in the presence of enzymatic activity associated with a particular disease process,” said lead authors Jennifer West, the Isabel C. Cameron Professor of Bioengineering and director of CBEN’s biological research program.

Other groups have used targeted nanostructures including quantum dots for molecular imaging, but they have never been able to adequately solve the problem of clearly distinguishing between the ‘cancer is here’ signal and the background light which arises from nanostructures not specifically bound to their molecular targets.

Rice’s technology solves this longstanding problem by using emissive nanoparticles called quantum dots that give off light in the near-infrared (NIR), a rare portion of the spectrum that has no background component in biomedical imaging. Near-infrared light also passes harmlessly through skin, muscle and cartilage, so the new probes could alert doctors to tumors and other diseases sites deep in the body without the need for a biopsy or invasive surgery.

The probe’s design makes use of a technique called “quenching” that involves tethering a gold nanoparticle to the quantum dot to inhibit luminescence. The tether, a peptide sequence measuring only a few nanometers, or billionths of a meter, holds the gold close enough to prevent the quantum dot from giving off its light.

In their test system, the Rice team used a peptide tether that is cleaved by the enzyme collagenase. They remained dark until the nanostructures were exposed to collagenase after which the luminescence steadily returned. Ultimately, the researchers hope to pair a series of quantum dots, each with a unique NIR optical signature, to peptides that are cleaved by specific protease makers of particular diseases.