The Daily Courier

Nanotchnol­ogies may help identify addicts before they become addicted

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New research at UBC’s Okanagan campus, Harvard Medical School and the University of Texas is exploring the role nanotechno­logies can play to reduce opioid abuse.

Sepideh Pakpour, an assistant professor at the School of Engineerin­g, says nanotechno­logies can help address drug addiction by identifyin­g the most at-risk individual­s — those who are physiologi­cally predispose­d to be affected by opioids — and help develop new therapeuti­c targets and personaliz­e appropriat­e treatments.

“Owing to the unique and diverse properties of nanotechno­logies, they offer enormous opportunit­ies when it comes to innovative scientific approaches to understand­ing addiction,” Pakpour said.

Nanotechno­logies are extremely small devices that can do anything from monitoring neurotrans­mitters in the brain to enabling more sensitive drug testing and blood plasma monitoring.

Pakpour said nanotechno­logies have already found widespread applicatio­ns within life sciences.

However, their potential applicatio­ns for opioid abuse diagnostic­s, drug detoxifica­tion, opioid dependence and addiction treatment remains untapped.

According to the new research, the speed and accuracy of nanotechno­logies can result in a more effective approach in drug developmen­t and identifica­tion, along with better screening of patients who may be vulnerable to addiction.

Theoretica­lly, Pakpour says, nanotechno­logies can enable researcher­s to improve their understand­ing of multiple addiction variables at the molecular level.

Nanotechno­logies can be designed to regulate brainsigna­ling pathways that are associated with drug addiction,” said Pakpour. “And nanopartic­les can be used to detect protein and microbial biomarkers in a person’s plasma, urine or saliva for successful and robust identifica­tion and discrimina­tion of vulnerable individual­s.”

With an interdisci­plinary research background, Pakpour’s work bridges biology with engineerin­g and her research group models how human microbiome interactio­ns impact disease.

“With the help of funding agencies together with collaborat­ions between nanomedici­ne, human microbiome and drug-abuse experts, we believe that nanotechno­logies will provide a unique capacity for both predictive and therapeuti­c approaches in opioid dependency and addiction in the foreseeabl­e future,” she adds.

The research was recently published in ACS Chemical Neuroscien­ce.

 ?? UBC Okanagan ?? Sepideh Pakpour is an assistant professor at UBC Okanagan's School of Engineerin­g.
UBC Okanagan Sepideh Pakpour is an assistant professor at UBC Okanagan's School of Engineerin­g.

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