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Anti-Cancer Nanoparticles: Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute
Design Gene-Tipped Tumor Regressor "Smartbombs"
La Jolla, CA. June 27, 2002 - A group of researchers from The Scripps Research
Institute (TSRI) have demonstrated what, in principle, could be a new way of
treating cancer and several other diseases where angiogenesis occurs. Angiogenesis,
the formation and differentiation of new blood vessels, is a crucial process
in cancer, and, when blocked, improves a patient's prognosis.
In cancer-related angiogenesis, tumors develop their own blood supplies by
causing cells that line blood vessels to proliferate, forming new vessels and
bringing more blood to the tumor. The increased oxygen and nutrients the tumors
receive allows them to grow and enables certain "metastatic" cells to leave the
tumor, enter the bloodstream, migrate to other tissues of the body, and establish
more tumors.
In an article appearing in the latest issue of the journal Science,
the TSRI investigators combined a gene that shuts off angiogenesis with a 50-100
nanometer-sized particle that selectively targets the cells that form new blood
vessels in cancer tumors. This approach combines gene delivery with specific
vascular targeting thereby effectively disrupting the blood supply of tumors
without influencing the normal blood vessels or any other tissue.
This anti-cancer nanoparticle is like a smart bomb that delivers its multiple
warhead genetic payload into endothelial cells that proliferate during angiogenesis - which
is the medical equivalent of cutting off all the supply routes to destroy the
tumor. Once angiogenesis is stopped, the tumor cells starve, and the tumor is
ultimately destroyed.
Anti-angiogenics have been known of and studied for many years, but this
anti-cancer nanoparticle is a new type of anti-angiogenic. Unlike other, "systemic" angiogenesis
blockers, which become diffused throughout the blood steam upon injection, the
nanoparticle-targeting vehicle directs itself to areas of the body where the
tumors exist and where local vascular cells are expanding to form new blood vessels.
The nanoparticle homes in on these cells and drops off multiple copies of a gene
that effectively blocks angiogenesis and kills tumors.
"We saw strong regression of large tumors in every system we looked at," says
TSRI Immunology Professor David Cheresh, Ph.D., who led the study.
In the current study, the TSRI investigators first report how they successfully
delivered nanoparticles with "reporter" genes - such as those encoding for
luciferase or green fluorescent protein, proteins that glow like the tail of
a firefly. These reporter genes allowed dramatic demonstrations of the specific
targeting of the nanoparticles to tumors. (The tumors glowed green under a microscope).
Cheresh and his colleagues then combined the nanoparticle with the mutant Raf gene
and tested whether they could regress tumors in vivo, and they found the technique
worked. Everywhere there were metastatic lesions in the lung or liver, the Raf gene
eliminated them.
The next step, says Cheresh, is to develop the technique in a more refined
way as a general approach towards cancer therapy. The method might prove efficacious
alongside some existing chemotherapy, for instance, and thereby reduce the toxicity
of existing anti-cancer drugs.
And, he adds, these nanoparticles may be useful in several other diseases
where angiogenesis plays a major role - like heart disease, stroke, rheumatoid
arthritis, and certain types of blindness in elderly patients (age-related macular
degeneration) and in patients with diabetes (diabetic retinopathy).
The research article "Tumor Regression by Targeted Gene Delivery to the Neovasculature" is
authored by John D. Hood, Mark Bednarski, Ricardo Frausto, Samira Guccione, Ralph
A. Reisfeld, Rong Xiang, and David A. Cheresh and appears in the June 28, 2002
issue of the journal Science.
The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health and by a
grant from Merck KGAa.
For more information contact:
Keith McKeown
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.8134
Fax: 858.784.8118
kmckeown@scripps.edu
Copyright © 2002 TSRI.
All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of TSRI is prohibited.
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