NEWS: Electronic nose sniffs out cancer: Nanotech sensor can also determine metastacity
R. Colin Johnson
(06/25/2009 10:31 AM EDT)
URL: http://www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=218101335
PORTLAND, Ore. — Anecdotal evidence that dogs can
detect cancer by smell inspired researchers to combine clever chemistry with
optical detectors to craft an electronic nose that they claim can not only
screen for any kind of cancer, but also determine whether it is aggressive.
A University of Massachusetts chemist and veterinarian collaborated with a
Georgia Tech biochemist and materials specialist to craft the laboratory
detection system, which they hope to develop into a universal blood test for
cancer.
"Dogs may be able to detect cancer, but they can't tell you what kind
or how dangerous it is," said University of Massachusetts chemist Vincent
Rotello, who worked with fellow professor Joseph Jerry, a veterinarian who
specializes in cancer detection.
To automate the alleged canine ability and imbue it with the desired
pinpoint accuracy, Rotello and Jerry worked with Georgia Tech professor Uwe
Bunz to craft gold nanoparticle-based materials. Like the red, green and blue
pixels that mix to represent any color, the different kinds of nanoparticles
can mix to cover the whole spectrum of cancer cells, the researchers found. The
"RGB-like" fluorescent nanoparticles are mixed with blood or tissue
samples, where they bind to suspicious cells and, depending on the combination
of particles that light up, indicate whether the cells are metastatic (capable
of spreading beyond the initial tumor site).
"Today there are blood tests for specific cancerous antigens, such as
those indicative of prostate cancer, but that test does not differentiate
between cancer that is aggressive and should be removed [and tumors that are]
nonaggressive and better off left alone," said Rotello. "Ours is the
first test that can detect any kind of cancer and how dangerous it is."
Next the researchers want to move from animal testing (currently conducted
on mice) toward a blood test for humans. "In your bloodstream, you have
all sorts of different cells that are sloughed off various organs [and that]
can be separated and analyzed," said Rotello. "This is how we could
user our 'nose' to do a simple blood test that detects any type of
cancer."
The polymer coating supplied to Rotello and Jerry by Bunz is called
para-phenyleneethynylene. PPE acquires the ability to glow when displaced from
the gold surface of a nanoparticle as a cell attaches itself, allowing the type
of cell to be determined by the light patterns generated. The particles are
induced to fluorescence with a laser.
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