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Nanoparticles find tumors, form clumps.


Newly designed nanoparticles could have dual benefits for fighting cancer. Not only do these tiny particles home in on tumors, but they also stick together once they enter tumors' blood vessels Blood vessels

Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names.
. The particles could eventually be a means to choke off to stop a person in the execution of a purpose; as, to choke off a speaker by uproar.

See also: Choke
 the blood vessels that deliver nutrients to tumors or to ferry cancer-killing drugs, researchers report.

In the past several years, scientists have designed several types of cancer-seeking nanoparticles by coating bits of iron with molecules that stick to proteins found only in tumors. Choosing an even tighter target, Erkki Ruoslahti of the Burnham Institute for Medical Research The Burnham Institute for Medical Research celebrates its 30th anniversary this year. Founded in La Jolla, California, as a non-profit medical research institute focused on cancer research, the Burnham has grown to a 750 person effort, with an annual operating budget of $87 million.  in Santa Barbara, Calif., and his colleagues covered iron nanoparticles with a peptide they designed to adhere to proteins found only in tumor blood vessels.

The researchers injected these nanoparticles into mice that had been implanted with human-breast tumors. After gathering inside tumors, the particles clumped and blocked about 20 percent of each tumor's blood vessels. Adorned with the iron clumps, the tumors became easily visible in magnetic resonance magnetic resonance, in physics and chemistry, phenomenon produced by simultaneously applying a steady magnetic field and electromagnetic radiation (usually radio waves) to a sample of atoms and then adjusting the frequency of the radiation and the strength of the  images, Ruoslahti's team reports in the Jan. 16 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

The team is currently working to improve the particles' cancer-fighting abilities by increasing their potential to block blood vessels and by designing hollow nanoparticles that can also deliver chemotherapy drugs.
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Title Annotation:BIOMEDICINE
Publication:Science News
Date:Jan 20, 2007
Words:212
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