The Asian Age

Cancer- fighting nanorobots can destroy tumours

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Washington, Feb. 13: Scientists have successful­ly developed nanorobots using DNA origami that can shrink tumours by cutting off their blood supply, paving the way for novel cancer therapies. Each nanorobot is made from a flat, rectangula­r DNA origami sheet, 90 nanometres by 60 nanometres in size.

A key blood- clotting enzyme, called thrombin, is attached to the surface. Thrombin can block tumour blood flow by clotting the blood within the vessels that feed tumour growth, causing a sort of tumour mini- heart attack, and leading to tumour tissue death, researcher­s said, “We have developed the first fully autonomous, DNA robotic system for a very precise drug design and targeted cancer therapy,” said Hao Yan, from Arizona State University ( ASU) in the US.

“Moreover, this technology is a strategy that can be used for many types of cancer, since all solid tumourfeed­ing blood vessels are essentiall­y the same,” said Yan.

DNA origami, in the past two decades, has developed atomic- scale manufactur­ing to build more and more complex structures.

The bricks to build their structures come from DNA, which can self- fold into all sorts of shapes and sizes — all at a scale one thousand times smaller than the idth of a human hair — in the hopes of one day revolution­ising computing, electronic­s and medicine. Until now, the challenge to advancing nanomedici­ne has been difficult because scientists wanted to design, build and carefully control nanorobots to actively seek and destroy cancerous tumours — while not harming any healthy cells. Researcher­s including those from Chinese Academy of Sciences overcame this problem by using a simple strategy to very selectivel­y seek and starve out a tumour.

“These nanorobots can be programmed to transport molecular payloads and cause onsite tumour blood supply blockages, which can lead to tissue death and shrink the tumour," said Baoquan Ding, a professor at National Center for Nanoscienc­e and Technology ( NCNST) in China.

To perform the study, scientists used a mouse tumour model, where human cancer cells are injected into a mouse to induce aggressive tumour growth. Once the tumour was growing, the nanorobots were deployed to come to the rescue.

The nanorobot is programmed to only attack cancer cells, researcher­s said.

Once bound to the tumour blood vessel surface, the nanorobot delivers its unsuspecti­ng drug cargo in the very heart of the tumour, exposing an enzyme called thrombin that is key to blood clotting.

The nanorobots worked fast, congregati­ng in large numbers to quickly surround the tumour just hours after injection. — PTI

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