Targeting drugs using 'triggered release' via nanoparticles
Date: Jan-19-2015 Nanotechnology allows us to manipulate matter in new ways at the scale of atoms
and molecules. In a new study, researchers show how they are using it to develop a drug
delivery system that could precisely trigger drug release - for instance, only inside target cells.
Four stages of transition from cylindrical parent nanoparticles to spherical daughter nanoparticles.
Image credit: Andrew Dove
The researchers describe their new "triggered-release" mechanism in the journal Nature
Communications.
The mechanism starts with two "parent" nanoparticles, each carrying one half of the drug.
The parents are designed to interact only when they are near each other. When they interact,
they create a "daughter" particle that releases the complete, active drug.
Andrew Dove, one of the senior investigators and a professor in the Department of Chemistry
at the University of Warwick in the UK, says:
"We conceive that in the blood stream the particles would not be able to interact
sufficiently to lead to release, only when they are taken into cells would the release be able
to happen."
"In this way," he adds, "the drug can be targeted to only release where we want it to and
therefore be more effective and reduce side effects."
Another advantage of the mechanism is that it does not require an external stimulus to
activate the interaction and release the drug.
Prof. Dove says the trick is getting the right chemical structure of the parent
nanoparticles. While they are both made of cylinder-shaped polymer chains, they differ in the
way their chemical bonds are directed within one part of their structure.
When the two parent nanoparticles are near enough to each other, the two polymer chains
undergo a process called "stereocomplexation" that leads to a new "daughter" nanoparticle.
"In the process of this rearrangement, we propose that any molecules - such as drug molecules -
that are encapsulated within the parent particles will be released," Prof. Dove explains.
Team now plans to investigate use of triggered release for cancer drug delivery
Prof. Dove says while they now plan to see how the triggered-release mechanism might be used
to develop new cancer treatments, there is no reason why it could not also be used for a wide
range of diseases.
Curiously, the daughter nanoparticles are not cylindrical like the parents, but spherical.
The authors say this is because of a "stereocomplexation driving force that exists in this
system changes the crystallization behavior of the core-forming blocks."
In May 2014, Medical News Today reported how researchers could see a way to make
purer, safer drugs using 'twisted light' and
nanotechnology. They showed how exploiting the way tiny nanoscale structures uniquely twist
light, it was possible to identify the undesirable - and potentially harmful - mirror image twin
of a drug molecule.
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
Not to be reproduced without permission.
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Courtesy: Medical News Today
Note: Any medical information available in this news section is not intended as a substitute for informed medical
advice and you should not take any action before consulting with a health care professional.