Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2006, 45, 3161–3165 doi: 10.1002/anie.200600259 Nr. 18/2006 Making Cancer Cells VisibleTumor proteases change the magnetic properties of nanoparticlesContact: Sangeeta N. Bhatia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge (USA) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Proteolytic Actuation of Nanoparticle Self-Assembly
Wouldn’t it be nice if we could detect tumors and
their metastases as easily as we find broken bones with X-rays? A team
of scientists headed by S. Bhatia in Boston (USA) has been working on
this problem. They have found a way to make a tumor-specific protease
visible by using Fe3O4 nanoparticles and magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI).
Organic tissue is mostly made of water and fat,
substances that contain many protons (positively charged hydrogen ions
or hydrogen nuclei). These have an intrinsic angular momentum, known as
spin, and thus a magnetic moment. In a magnetic field, they line up and
rotate with a certain frequency that is proportional to the strength of
the external field. If electromagnetic waves with the same frequency
(resonance) are beamed in, they disturb the orientation of the protons
in the external material field. When the electromagnetic wave is
switched off, the protons flip back to their original position, which
causes them to give off an electromagnetic signal of their own. This can
be detected and gives information about the proton density and the
chemical environment in the region being studied. These data allow for
the computation of a 3D image that depicts the different tissues in the
body.
How can this be used to detect mutated cells with the
best possible resolution and high confidence? The Boston researchers used nanoparticles of Fe3O4
whose magnetic properties change when they aggregate into large multimeric
complexes.
Two biomolecules that bind to each other with high
affinity, biotin and neutravidin, act as a “glue” to hold the Fe
3O4 particles together. Half of the nanoparticles are coated
with biotin, the other half with neutravidin. Long polyethylene glycol
(PEG) chains are coupled to these biomolecules in order to keep the
particles from interacting with each other. The anchor for the PEG
chains is a peptide that contains a segment that can be cleaved by a
tumor-specific enzyme, matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2).
MMP-2 is mostly found in the immediate area around
growing tumor cells, meaning that the PEG chains are only cleaved from the Fe3O4 nanoparticles when they are near a
tumor. This then allows the biotin–neutrovidin glue to do its job—the
Fe3O4 particles aggregate and the tumor becomes
visible in the MRI image.
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