Confocal fluorescence image of gold nanotures (green) in mesothelioma cells.
Courtesy: Arsalan Azad
Gold
nanotubes—tiny hollow cylinders one thousandth the width of a human hair—could
be used to treat mesothelioma, a type of cancer caused by exposure to asbestos,
according to a team of researchers at the Universities of Cambridge and Leeds.
In a study
published today in journal Small, the researchers demonstrate that once inside
the cancer cells, the nanotubes absorb light, causing them to heat up, thereby
killing the cells.
More than
2,600 people are diagnosed in the UK each year with mesothelioma, a malignant
form of cancer caused by exposure to asbestos. Although the use of asbestos is
outlawed in the UK now, the country has the world's highest levels of
mesothelioma because it imported vast amounts of asbestos in the post-war
years. The global usage of asbestos remains high, particularly in low- and
middle-income countries, which means mesothelioma will become a global problem.
"Mesothelioma
is one of the 'hard-to-treat' cancers, and the best we can offer people with
existing treatments is a few months of extra survival," said Dr. Arsalan
Azad from the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research at the University of
Cambridge. "There's an important unmet need for new, effective
treatments."
In 2018,
the University of Cambridge was awarded £10million from the Engineering and
Physical Sciences Research Council to help develop engineering solutions,
including nanotech, to find ways to address hard-to-treat cancers.
In a
collaboration between the University of Cambridge and University of Leeds,
researchers have developed a form of gold nanotubes whose physical properties
are 'tunable'—in other words, the team can tailor the wall thickness,
microstructure, composition, and ability to absorb particular wavelengths of
light.
The
researchers added the nanotubes to mesothelioma cells cultured in the lab and
found that they were absorbed by the cells, residing close to the nucleus,
where the cell's DNA lies. When the team targeted the cells with a laser, the
nanotubes absorbed the light and heated up, killing the mesothelioma cell.
Professor
Stefan Marciniak, also from the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research,
added, "The mesothelioma cells 'eat' the nanotubes, leaving them
susceptible when we shine light on them. Laser light is able to penetrate deep
into tissue without causing damage to surrounding tissue. It then gets absorbed
by the nanotubes, which heat up and, we hope in the future, could be used to
cause localized cancer-cell killing."
The team
will be developing the work further to ensure the nanotubes are targeted to
cancer cells with less effect on normal tissue.
The
nanotubes are made in a two-step process. First, solid silver nanorods are
created of the desired diameter. Gold is then deposited from solution onto the
surface of the silver. As the gold builds-up at the surface, the silver
dissolves from the inside to leave a hollow nanotube.
The
approach advanced by the Leeds team allows these nanotubes to be developed at
room temperature, which should make their manufacture at scale more feasible.
Professor
Stephen Evans from the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of
Leeds said: "Having control over the size and shape of the nanotubes
allows us to tune them to absorb light where the tissue is transparent and will
allow them to be used for both the imaging and treatment of cancers. The next
stage will be to load these nanotubes with medicines for enhanced
therapies."