A new spin on drug delivery
Chang Lu and his chemical engineering research group at Virginia Tech have discovered how to "greatly enhance" the delivery of DNA payloads into cells. The description of their work will be featured on the cover of Lab on a Chip (issue 16), the premier journal for researchers in microfluidics. http://www.rsc.org/Publishing/Journals/LC/article.asp?doi=c004472e The work also appears in the July 8 issue of Nature magazine (Vol. 466, p. 163) http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v466/n7303/pdf/466163d.pdf
Lu's ultimate goal is to apply this technique to create genetically modified cells for cancer immunotherapy, stem cell therapy and tissue regeneration.
One of the most widely used physical methods to deliver genes into cells "is incredibly inefficient because only a small fraction of a cell's total membrane surface can be permeated," said Lu, an associate professor of chemical engineering at Virginia Tech. http://www.microfluidics.che.vt.edu/
The method Lu is referring to is called electroporation, a phenomenon known for decades that increases the permeability of a cell by applying an electric field to generate tiny pores in the membrane of cells.
Lu called the process "a new spin on DNA delivery." He explained the process saying, "Conventional electroporation methods deliver DNA only within a very small portion of the cell surface, determined by the physics governing the interaction between an electric field and a cell. Our method enables uniform DNA delivery over the entire cell surface, which is the first time we are aware that this has been demonstrated. The result is a greatly enhanced transfer of the genetic material."
Lu said his new approach harnesses "hydrodynamic effects that uniquely occur when fluids flow along curved paths. Flow under these conditions is known to generate vortices. Cells carried by such flow experience rotation and spinning that help expose the majority area of its surface to the electric field. " Having the gene delivery done by flows in curved paths is key in the gene delivery as opposed to the traditionally used, electroporation in static solution or in straight channels. "A spiral-shaped channel design yields a two-fold increase than a straight channel and an even larger factor compared to in static solution," he added.
By using fluorescence microscopy, they were able to "map" the area on the cell surface that was subjected to electroporation, and determine the extent of the DNA entry into the cell.
Lu explained the conventional delivery using a cuvette-type of device with static cell suspension produces DNA delivery confined to a narrow zone on the cell surface. However, when electroporation is applied to flowing cells in a spiral or curved channel , the images "appear dramatically different with the DNA delivery uniformly distributed over the entire cell surface."
Source: Virginia Tech
Related
- Advances in cancer detection research by Virginia Tech engineer featured in British magazineThu, 28 Jan 2010, 16:52:49 EST
- Promise of nanodiamonds for safer gene therapyTue, 1 Sep 2009, 11:59:47 EDT
- Nano bubble gum for enhancing drug delivery in gutMon, 9 Nov 2009, 13:37:12 EST
- Researchers develop and test new molecule as a delivery vehicle to image and kill brain tumors Thu, 4 Aug 2011, 3:32:50 EDT
- Louisiana Tech professor's 'metamaterials' research lands cover of international journalThu, 10 Sep 2009, 12:52:12 EDT
Other sources
- A new spin on drug deliveryfrom Science CentricSat, 10 Jul 2010, 4:00:50 EDT
- A new spin on drug deliveryfrom Science BlogFri, 9 Jul 2010, 13:07:24 EDT
- A new spin on drug delivery: Enhanced delivery of DNA payloads into cellsfrom PhysorgFri, 9 Jul 2010, 12:42:30 EDT
- New spin on drug delivery: Chemical engineers discover an enhanced delivery method of DNA payloads into cellsfrom Science DailyFri, 9 Jul 2010, 12:21:27 EDT
- A New Spin on Gene Deliveryfrom Newswise - ScinewsThu, 8 Jul 2010, 11:49:21 EDT
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