Quantum Dots Light Up Prostate Cancer
ARLINGTON, Va., Aug. 30, 2004 -- Quantum dots---tiny beads that glow
in rainbow colors---can zero in with pinpoint accuracy on human prostate
cancer.
The research by biomedical engineer Shuming Nie, Ph.D., and his colleagues
at the Georgia Institute of Technology suggests a new way to detect
and treat disease from the molecular level to that of the whole body.
Because of their size, quantum dots fall under the banner of nanotechnology.
They are typically made from semiconductor crystals of cadmium selenide
encased in a zinc sulfide shell as small as 1 nanometer (one-billionth
of a meter). In ultraviolet light, each dot radiates a brilliant color.
Because exposure to cadmium could be hazardous, quantum dots have not
found their way into clinical use, but have been used as markers to
tag particles of interest in the laboratory.
Nie's group came up with a new design that protects the body from
exposure to the cadmium by sealing quantum dots in a polymer capsule.
The surface of each capsule can attach to different molecules. In this
case, Nie's group attached monoclonal antibodies directed against prostate-specific
surface antigen, which is found on prostate cancer cells.
The researchers injected these quantum dots into live mice that had
human prostate cancers. The dots collected in the tumors in numbers
large enough to be visible in ultraviolet light under a microscope.
Because the dots are so small, the can be used to locate individual
molecules, making them extremely sensitive as detectors. Nie's group
estimates that quantum dots could improve tumor imaging sensitivity
tenfold with the ability to locate as few as 10 to 100 cancer cells.
The size of quantum dots also makes them potentially useful for delivering
cancer-fighting drugs directly to the tumor site without affecting adjacent,
healthy tissue. A major question standing in the way of developing quantum
dots for medical purposes is how, or if, they are expelled from the
body. These and other safety issues would have to be addressed before
human testing could be considered.
Quantum dots have been used in the laboratory to detect breast cancer
cells and to detect individual breast cancer cells that break away from
the tumor site. They have also been useful as markers in other molecular
and genetic research.
Nie received a Whitaker Foundation Biomedical Engineering Research
Grant in 1991 for sensor research.
Contact:
Shuming Nie, Georgia Institute of Technology
Frank Blanchard, The Whitaker
Foundation
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