Scientists have developed nanometer-sized 'cargo ships' that can sail
throughout the body via the bloodstream without immediate detection
from the body's immune radar system and ferry their cargo of
anti-cancer drugs and markers into tumors that might otherwise go
untreated or undetected.
In a forthcoming issue of the Germany-based chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie,
scientists at UC San Diego, UC Santa Barbara and MIT report that their
nano-cargo-ship system integrates therapeutic and diagnostic functions
into a single device that avoids rapid removal by the body's natural
immune system.
"The idea involves
encapsulating imaging agents and drugs into a protective 'mother ship'
that evades the natural processes that normally would remove these
payloads if they were unprotected," said Michael Sailor, a professor of
chemistry and biochemistry at UCSD who headed the team of chemists,
biologists and engineers that turned the fanciful concept into reality.
"These mother ships are only 50 nanometers in diameter, or 1,000 times
smaller than the diameter of a human hair, and are equipped with an
array of molecules on their surfaces that enable them to find and
penetrate tumor cells in the body."
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