U.S. National Institute of Health www.cancer.gov National Cancer Institute
National Cancer Institute
NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer

Skip Header Links
About Programs News Resources Events Intranet Login
National Cancer Institute


NCI Alliance for
Nanotechnology in Cancer


Nanotech News

 

  Current Month

  News Archive

Monthly Features
News Releases
Alliance News
NCI Alliance Bulletin
News Conferences

Sign-up Today

 
Back

Nanotech News


July 2008

Nanoparticles Detect Telomerase Activity

Telomerase, an enzyme that prevents chromosomes from shortening when they divide, is widely suspected of playing a key role in making cancer cells immortal. Though researchers have developed a variety of methods for measuring the activity of this enzyme, none of these methods have proved suitable for use in diagnostic assays for cancer or in efforts to develop drugs that block telomerase activity. Now, a team of investigators at Northwestern University’s Nanomaterials for Cancer Diagnostics and Therapeutics has developed a new type of nanoparticle-based assay that appears to be both accurate and sensitive enough for clinical use.

Chad Mirkin, Ph.D., principal investigator of the National Cancer Institute-supported Center for Cancer Nanotechnology Excellence at Northwestern, led the research team that developed the new assay. Their results appear in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

The assay system consists of gold nanoparticles coated with short stretches of DNA that can serve as a substrate for telomerase. When a sample containing this enzyme is mixed with these nanoparticles, telomerase binds to the DNA sequences and begins adding repeated stretches of six specific nucleotides to the end of the DNA. After a short time, the investigators wash off any telomerase and then add magnetic microparticles coated with a piece of oligonucleotide that is complementary to the sequence added by telomerase. The coated magnetic microparticles bind to any elongated DNA and enable the researchers to separate those complexes from the rest of the gold nanoparticles by using a magnetic field. Next, the DNA sequences are removed from the gold nanoparticles and are detected using a silver development process and automated reader that Dr. Mirkin’s team invented for a related assay system, known as the biobarcode assay.

Using this assay, the investigators were able to reliably detect telomerase activity in as few as 10 to 1,000 tumor cells grown in culture. The researchers then showed that they could detect changes in telomerase activity after the addition of a known inhibitor of the enzyme, suggesting that this assay could help in efforts to develop telomerase inhibitors as anticancer agents.

This work, which was supported in part by the National Cancer Institute’s Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer, is detailed in the paper “A New Approach to Amplified Telomerase Detection with Polyvalent Oligonucleotide Nanoparticle Conjugates.” No abstract is available for this paper.
View PubMed citation


A Service of the National Cancer Institute

National Cancer Institute Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health FirstGov.gov Nanotechnology Characterization Lab Nanotechnology Teaming Portal


This web site contains file in PDF (Portable Document Format).
Adobe Acrobat PDF files are used to retain the formatting of original documents.
To view these files, the user will need to download the free Adobe reader.