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News Release
February 8, 2007
Boise State Researchers Study how Nanoparticles Could be Used to
Treat Diseases; Findings Presented at International Conference
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Biology professor
Denise Wingett, left,
is part of an i
nterdisciplinary
Boise State research
team that
is studying how
nanoparticles
could be
used to treat diseases.
Graduate student
Alma Hodzic, right,
works in Wingett’s lab
.
Click to Enlarge Image |
A Boise State University research team that studies how nanoparticles could
someday be used to help treat multiple sclerosis, psoriasis and other diseases
will present its findings at an upcoming international conference.
Denise Wingett, a biology professor at Boise State, will present the team’s
research at the Keystone Symposia’s conference on Nanotechnology in Biomedicine
Feb. 12-16 in Tahoe City, Calif. Physics professor Alex Punnoose, biology
professor Kevin Feris, and several undergraduate, graduate and post-doctoral
students are also part of the BSU team.
The upcoming conference is the first research presentation by the
interdisciplinary BSU team, which recently organized to study possible medical
applications, as well as possible toxic side effects, of certain kinds of
nanoparticles — tiny particles that take on new properties when manipulated on a
molecular level.
The use of nanoparticles in everything from sunscreen to stain-resistant pants
has raised concerns in recent months because little is known about their
potential health and environmental effects. The particles, just atoms wide, are
small enough to easily penetrate cells in lungs, brains and other organs.
In laboratory experiments, BSU researchers have shown that nanoparticles have
the ability to kill certain types of bacteria while having a minimal effect on
human immune cells. The researchers have also successfully linked a variety of
antibodies to the nanoparticles.
The initial results are encouraging, said Wingett, because they suggest that
nanoparticles could be used to target viruses, bacteria or infected body cells
by selectively delivering nanoparticles to the disease site.
In addition, the BSU researchers have shown that at considerably higher
concentrations, the nanoparticles preferentially target activated human immune
cells and destroy them. These findings suggest that nanoparticles could also be
useful to treat auto-immune diseases such as multiple sclerosis, psoriasis and
rheumatoid arthritis, where human immune cells attack normal body tissues.
The next step for BSU researchers is to conduct laboratory experiments to see
what happens when antibodies are linked to nanoparticles and a cell is then
targeted for destruction.
“This is a very promising area of study, and we are very much looking forward to
continuing our research in the months ahead,” said Wingett.
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Contact: Denise Wingett, Department of Biology, (208) 426-2921,
denisewingett@boisestate.edu
Media contact: Janelle Brown, Communications and Marketing, (208)
426-1790, jbrown2@boisestate.edu
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Last reviewed on
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
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