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02/07/05
-- Nano-sized particles embedded with bright, light-emitting molecules have
enabled researchers to visualize a tumor more than one centimeter below the
skin surface using only infrared light. A team of chemists, bioengineers and
medical researchers based at the University of Pennsylvania and the
University of Minnesota has lodged fluorescent materials called porphyrins
within the surface of a polymersome, a cell-like vesicle, to image a tumor
within a living rodent. Their findings, which represent a proof of principle
for the use of emissive polymersomes to target and visualize tumors, appear
in the Feb. 7 online early edition of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Science.
"We have
shown that the dispersion of thousands of brightly emissive multi-porphyrin
fluorophores within the polymersome membrane can be used to optically image
tissue structures deep below the skin -- with the potential to go even
deeper," said Michael J. Therien, a professor of chemistry at Penn. "It
should also be possible to use an emissive polymersome vesicle to transport
therapeutics directly to a tumor, enabling us to actually see if
chemotherapy is really going to its intended target."
This work
takes advantage of years of effort in the Therien laboratory focused on the
design of highly fluorescent compounds. Polymersomes, which were developed
by Penn professors Daniel A. Hammer and Dennis Discher in the mid-1990s,
function much like the bilayered membranes of living cells. Whereas cell
membranes are created from a double layer of fatty phospholipid chains, a
polymersome is comprised of two layers of synthetic co-polymers. Like a
living cell, the polymersome membrane has a hydrophobic core. The study
shows that the fluorophores evenly disperse within this core, giving rise to
a nanometer-sized light-emitting structure.
"These
polymers are also larger than phospholipids, so that there is enough space
for the fluorophores, which are larger than the average molecule that is
found inside cell membranes," said Hammer, professor and chair of the
Department of Bioengineering at Penn's School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences. "Another feature that makes emissive polymersomes so useful is
that they self-assemble. Simply mixing together all component parts gives
rise to these functional nanometer-sized, cell-like vesicles."
In their
study, the researchers demonstrate how they can use these emissive
polymersomes to target markers on the surface of a specific type of tumor
cells. When exposed to near-infrared light, which can travel through tissue,
the fluorophores within the polymersome respond with a bright near-infrared
signal that can then be detected.
"The
fluorophores function like reflectors stuck in the spokes of a bicycle
tire," Therien said. "When this structure absorbs light, it gives rise to an
intense, localized fluorescence signal that is uniquely suited for
visualizing living biological systems."
According to
Therein, there is keen interest in developing new technology that will
enable optical imaging of cancer tissue, as such technology will be less
costly and more accessible than MRI-based methods and free of the harmful
side effects associated with radioactivity. In this imaging system, the
flourophores can also be tuned to respond to different wavelengths of
near-infrared light. This sets the stage for using emissive polymersomes to
target multiple cancer cell-surface markers in the body simultaneously.
Emissive
polymersomes perform much like in vivo imaging systems that use
semiconductor-based "quantum dots." These quantum dots, however, are hard
matter, which could collect within the circulatory system, potentially
causing a stroke. According to the Penn researchers, brightly emissive
polymersomes define the first nanotech optical imaging platform based on
non-aggregating "soft matter" (polymers and porphyrins) and hence have
enormous potential in biomedicine.
Source: University of Pennsylvania |