Previous Pause Next
Home >> News Center >>
Nanobiotechnology Advances Point to Medical Applications PDF Print E-mail
User Rating :  / 0
Friday, 03 September 2010 15:22

Two new groundbreaking scientific papers by researchers at UC Santa Barbara demonstrate the synthesis of nanosize biological particles with the potential to fight cancer and other illnesses. The studies introduce new approaches that are considered "green" nanobiotechnology because they use no artificial compounds.

Luc Jaeger, associate professor of chemistry and biochemistry at UCSB, explained that there is nothing short of a revolution going on in his field -- one that permeates all areas of biochemistry, especially his area of nanobiotechnology. The revolution involves understanding the role of RNA in cells.

"Considering the fact that up to 90 percent of the human genome is transcribed into RNA, it becomes clear that RNA is one of the most important biopolymers on which life is based," said Jaeger. "We are still far from understanding all the tremendous implications of RNA in living cells."

Jaeger's team is putting together complex three-dimensional RNA molecules -- nanosize polyhedrons that could be used to fight disease. The molecules self assemble into the new shapes. The work is funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and there is a patent pending jointly between NIH and UCSB on the new designs.

"We are interested in using RNA assemblies to deliver silencing RNAs and therapeutic RNA aptamers to target cancer and other diseases," said Jaeger. "It is clear that RNA is involved in a huge number of key processes that are related to health issues."

Jaeger believes the RNA-based approaches to delivering new therapies in the body will be safer than those using artificial compounds that might have undesirable side effects down the line.

"By using RNA molecules as our primary medium, we are practicing 'green' nanobiotechnology," explained Jaeger. "The research program developed in my lab at UCSB aims at contributing in a positive way to medicine and synthetic biology. We try to avoid any approaches that raise controversial bioethical issues in the public square. It's not an easy task, but I am convinced that it will pay off in the long run."

The more recent of the two scientific papers describing the new work -- "In vitro assembly of cubic RNA-based scaffolds designed in silicon" -- published online August 30 by Nature Nanotechnology. The earlier paper -- "A polyhedron made of tRNAs" by Severcan and colleagues -- was published online on July 18 by Nature Chemistry. The print edition of this article will be published in Nature Chemistry's September issue.

The second author on the Nature Chemistry paper is Cody Geary, a postdoctoral fellow in Jaeger's lab. Kirill A. Afonin, also a postdoctoral fellow in Jaeger's lab, is the first author on the Nature Nanotechnnology article.

Bruce Shapiro, a senior author on the Nature Nanotechnology article, is based at the National Cancer Institute in Frederick, Md. and is also funded by NIH. Jaeger and his team worked with Shapiro to develop a computerized approach for facilitating the design of self-assembling RNA strands. Further assistance came from the National Resource for Automated Molecular Microscopy located at Scripps Institute in La Jolla, Calif.

Story Source:

The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by University of California - Santa Barbara.

Journal References:

  1. Kirill A. Afonin, Eckart Bindewald, Alan J. Yaghoubian, Neil Voss, Erica Jacovetty, Bruce A. Shapiro, Luc Jaeger. In vitro assembly of cubic RNA-based scaffolds designed in silico. Nature Nanotechnology, 2010; DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2010.160
  2. Isil Severcan, Cody Geary, Arkadiusz Chworos, Neil Voss, Erica Jacovetty, Luc Jaeger. A polyhedron made of tRNAs. Nature Chemistry, 2010; 2 (9): 772 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.733
 
FairExcellent 

Add comment  |   Add to my library  |  Forward this article

login to leave comment

Biomarkers & Drug Targets

Scripps research scientists elevate little-studied cellular mechanism to potential drug target

New advance announced in reducing 'bad' cholesterol

Proteins do not predict outcome of herceptin treatment in HER2-positive breast cancer

New gene study of ADHD points to defects in brain signaling pathways

Inhibitors of infamous Ras oncogene reported by Genentech researchers at ASCB annual meeting

SRI Researchers Validate Preclinical Effectiveness of Tuberculosis Drug Target that Could Shorten Treatment Time

New potential therapeutic target identified for Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

Vitamin D–fortified yoghurt improves cholesterol levels and heart disease biomarkers for diabetics

U-M researchers find genetic rearrangements driving 5 to 7 percent of breast cancers

Researchers discover genes involved in colorectal cancer

>> More in: Biomarkers & Drug Targets

Systems Bio & Personalized Med

New trial model unlocks power of personalized medicine

UPMC to Build $300M Center for 'Innovative' Biomedical Science

Manchester's 'first step' to perfect drug combinations

Good Start Genetics? Announces Validation Results For Its Next-Generation DNA Sequencing Platform For Genetic Disorder Carrier Screening

Young Genes Correlated With Evolution Of Human Brain

UGA Scientists Team Up To Define First-Ever Sequence Of Biologically Important Carbohydrate

Cells Are Crawling All Over Our Bodies, But How?

First-Ever Sequence and Structure of Biologically Important Carbohydrate

New Gene Therapy Methods Accurately Correct Mutation In Patient's Stem Cells, Bringing Personalized Cell Therapies One Step Closer

Cells Have Early-Warning System for Intruders

>> More in: Systems Bio & Personalized Med, Systems Bio & Personalized Med

Bio-Chip & Nanotechnology

Getting Cancer Cells to Swallow Poison: Nanotechnology Researchers Develop New Strategy to Deliver Chemotherapy to Prostate Cancer Cells

OU researchers target cancer with nanoparticles

UCLA physicists report nanotechnology feat with proteins

Lightning-fast, efficient data transmission developed at Stanford

A realistic look at the promises and perils of nanomedicine

Berkeley Lab Researchers Ink Nanostructures with Tiny ‘Soldering Iron’

Study indicates nanoparticles could help pain-relieving osteoarthritis drugs last longer

Mobile Electrons Multiplied in Quantum Dot Films

Could a Computer One Day Rewire Itself? New Nanomaterial 'Steers' Electric Currents in Multiple Dimensions

Nano Funnel Used to Generate Extreme Ultraviolet Light Pulses

>> More in: Bio-Chip & Nanotechnology

Biomedical Imaging

Penn engineers develop more effective MRI contrast agent for cancer detection

PET Technique Promises Better Detection and Therapy Response Assessment for a Deadly Form of Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma

A single cell endoscope

Yale researchers develop a way to monitor engineered blood vessels as they grow in patients

Integrated 3-D imaging facilitates human face transplantation

Combined arterial imaging technology reveals both structural and metabolic details

Cornell Reaches Two Milestones toward a New Coherent X-ray Source

Test Combination Helps Predict Alzheimer's Disease Risk

New Instrument Helps Researchers See How Diseases Start And Develop In Minute Detail

Trio of Studies Support Use of PET/CT Scans as Prostate Cancer Staging Tool

>> More in: Biomedical Imaging