HomeNewsIndia NewsQuantum Dots imaging Tumor signals without any adverse effect

    Quantum Dots imaging Tumor signals without any adverse effect

    A novel proof-of-concept nanosystem for the visualization of tumors generates bright tumor signals by delivering near-infrared quantum dots (QDs) to cancer cells without any toxic effects. The QDs are delivered intravenously into extravascular tumor tissue and cells to gain bright tumor signals. Some QDs leave the bloodstream and cross membranes, entering cancer cells. Fluorescent signals emitted from excess QDs that remain in the bloodstream are made invisible by injecting a membrane-impermeable etchant to eliminate background signals.

    The biocompatible QD platform loses photoluminescence upon cation exchange, which occurs when zinc in the QDs is exchanged for silver in the etchant. Silver-containing QDs lose their fluorescent capabilities, and because the etchant can’t cross membranes to reach tumor cells, the QDs that have reached the tumor remain fluorescent.

    Subsequent etching quenches excess QDs, leaving a highly tumor-specific signal provided by the intact QDs remaining in the extravascular tumor cells and fibroblasts. Renal excretion of the cations released from the QDs minimizes potential toxicity.

    “The novelty of our nanosystem is how the etchant works,” said researcher Gary Braun.

    Researchers used a mice model harboring human breast, prostate and gastric tumors to develop the method. QDs were actively delivered to tumors using the iRGD peptide.

    “To our knowledge, this is the first in vivo example of a background-destroying etchant being used to enhance the specificity of imaging,” said Kazuki Sugahara, M.D. “We are encouraged that we were able to achieve a tumor-specific contrast index (CI) between five- and ten-fold greater than the general cut-off for optical imaging, which is 2.5.”

    The system also facilitates the detection of peritoneal tumors with high specificity upon intraperitoneal tumor targeting and selective etching of excess untargeted QDs.

    “Moving forward we will focus on developing our novel nanosystem to work with routine imaging tests like PET scans and MRIs. In our studies with mice, we use optical imaging, which isn’t always practical for humans,” Sugahara said.

    In vivo cation exchange could provide a way to enhance specificity of tumor imaging. A business is being formed to further develop the platform for human use.

    The research was performed at Sandford-Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute (SBP). The research was published in Nature Communications (doi:10.1038/s41467-017-00153-y).

    Source: Photonicsmedia

    ELE Times Bureau
    ELE Times Bureauhttps://www.eletimes.ai/
    ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

    Related News

    Must Read

    New LX4580 – Highly Integrated 24‑Channel Mixed‑Signal IC for Aviation & Defence Actuation Systems

    Microchip Technology announces the LX4580, a 24‑channel mixed‑signal IC designed...

    TI redoubles advancement of next-gen physical AI with NVIDIA

    Texas Instruments announced accelerating the safe deployment of humanoid...

    Everspin Advances High-Reliability xSPI MRAM Portfolio With Complete Production Qualification for 64Mb MRAM

    Everspin Technologies, the world’s leading developer and manufacturer of...

    R&S acquires SRS, specialists in SDR communications solutions

    Rohde & Schwarz acquired Software Radio Systems (SRS), a...

    Differentiating Between LPDDR6, LPDDR5, and LPDDR5X

    Courtesy: Synopsys Advances in memory standards are driving faster and...

    Arrow Electronics and Infineon introduce 240W USB-C PD 3.2 reference design for battery-powered motor control applications

    Arrow Electronics and Infineon Technologies AG have announced REF_ARIF240GaN, a...

    Robotics Engineering: The Architectural Evolution Behind IT–OT Convergence

    Factories today operate as dense mechanical ecosystems, whether in...

    How AI Is Transforming Network Protocol Testing in Software-Defined Networks?

    As enterprises accelerate toward cloud-native infrastructure, edge computing, and...

    What is Fashion Tech? Providing New Product Value and Customer Experiences with Technology

    Courtesy: Murata Electronics What is fashion tech? - diverse technologies...