submit news    HOME | FEEDBACK  


« NAVIGATION »
NEWS

- Bio/Medicine

- Chemicals

- Defense

- Drug Delivery

- Education

- Electronics

- Energy

- Events

- Grants

- Industry

- Investment

- Litigation

- Materials

- MEMS

- Nanofabrication

- Nanoparticles

- Nanotubes

- Optics

- Partnership

- Patent

- Products

- Quantum dots

- Research

- Smart Dust

- Software
COMPANIES
EVENTS

- Browse by Month

- Current Shows

- Previous Shows

- Submit Events
FEEDBACK
ADVERTISE
LINK TO US

« PARTNERS »
Become A Nanotechwire Partner

FEI Company

Veeco Instruments

NanoDynamics

Nano Science and Technology Institute

National Nanotechnology Initiative

Nanotechnology at Zyvex

Want to see your Company or Organization listed above? Become A Nanotechwire Partner Today - click here
« NEWSLETTER »



« SEARCH »







7/17/2010 11:04:05 PM
Sugar-Coated Nanotubes Deliver High-Dose Radiotherapy

Starting with simple carbon nanotubes, a team of researchers from the United Kingdom and Spain has developed a sugar-coated nanocapsule that can deliver large doses of radioactivity to tumors. The researchers envision developing a series of nanoscale delivery devices that can target specific organs in the body for radiation therapy or imaging by tinkering with the sugar coating on the nanocapsule.

The research team was led by Benjamin Davis of Oxford University, Kostas Kostarelos of the University of London, and , and Gerard Tobias of the Institut de Cičncia de Materials de Barcelona. The investigators reported the results of their work in the journal Nature Materials.

To create their loaded nanotubes, the investigators prepare a mixture of carbon nanotubes and sodium iodide made from radioactive iodine-125 inside a silica ampoule and heated it to 900° C for four hours. When heated to this temperature, sodium iodide and other metal salts form nanocrystals inside the nanotubes. As the nanotubes cool, their ends self-seal, trapping the radioactive nanocrystals safely inside the carbon containers. After washing the sealed tubes to remove any salts that aren’t encased, the researchers then perform a mild chemical reaction that leaves the end caps unaltered while adding chemical groups to which sugar molecules can attach. In a final step, the scientists add one of many types of sugar molecules to the nanotube surface. In this study, they used a simple sugar known as N-acetyl glucosamine. The researchers note that this synthetic scheme can be used to add other radioactive metal salts to nanotubes and to add other sugar molecules to the surface of the nanotubes.

Numerous tests showed that radioactive payload remained trapped in the sealed nanotubes under a variety of physiological conditions. When injected into tail vein of mice, the researchers were able to image the nanotubes as they accumulated in the lungs using a common imaging technology known as single photon emission computed tomography, or SPECT.

When injected into the body, free sodium iodide normally concentrates in the thyroid gland, not the lungs. The carbon nanotubes did not accumulate in liver, spleen, and kidneys or other organs that usually accumulate injected nanoparticles. The researchers hypothesize that N-acetyl glucosamine targets the nanotubes to the lung by binding to a lung-specific protein known to bind tightly to this sugar.

This work is detailed in a paper titled, “Filled and glycosylated carbon nanotubes for in vivo radioemitter localization and imaging.” An abstract of this paper is available at the journal’s Web site.

View abstract.

Other Headlines from NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer ...
 - Lab-on-a-Chip Platform Performs Molecular Dissection of Single Brain Tumor Cells
 - Porous Silica Nanoparticles Deliver Anticancer Therapy
 - Surprise Finding When Humble Protein and Nanoparticles Tag-Team to Kill Cancer Cells
 - Nanosensors Detect Signs of Cancer in Human Breath
 - Improving Cisplatin with Nanoparticles

More Nanotubes Headlines ...
 - A versatile, clean and efficient way to enhance widespread application of carbon nanotubes
 - "Greening" Your Flat Screen TV
 - Extreme Darkness: Carbon Nanotube Forest Covers NIST’s Ultra-dark Detector
 - Tiny tubes making waves in kayak design
 - Nanotubes pass acid test


« Back To List »

« GET LISTED »
- submit company
- submit news
- submit events
- advertise here

« EVENTS »
Symposium on Ultra Clean Processing of Semiconductor Surfaces (UCPSS)
The purpose of the UCPSS symposium to increase the level of understanding on ultra-clean processing technology in all steps of the IC-production, PV and bioelectronics.

9TH International Symposium on Scanning Probe Microscopy & Optical Tweezers in Life Sciences
JOINT MEETING 2010 - A forum for applications in scanning probe and optical tweezers technologies in life sciences.

Nanomedicine: Reality Now and Soon - ESF-UB Conference in Biomedicine
This conference aims to provide detailed understanding and discuss the clinical utility of those areas of nanomedicine which are close to application or already clinically applied/on the market.

- More Events


Copyright © 2010 Nanotechwire.com | Privacy Policy |