(Press-News.org) Beating cancer is all about early detection, and new research from the University of South Carolina is another step forward in catching the disease early. A team of chemists is reporting a new way to detect just a handful of lurking tumor cells, which can be outnumbered a billion to one in the bloodstream by healthy cells.
The researchers have constructed an ultrasensitive nanoprobe that can electrochemically sense as few as four circulating tumor cells, and it doesn't require any enzymes to produce a detectable signal.
"That makes it a very robust system," says Hui Wang, a chemist in the university's College of Arts and Sciences who led the research team with South Carolina colleague Qian Wang and Jun-Jie Zhu of Nanjing University. "We show that it's much less sensitive to pH and temperature than the natural enzyme horseradish peroxidase, a traditional means of enhancing sensitivity."
Cancer can metastasize by releasing tumor cells that are capable of spreading the disease to new parts of the body. But the circulating cells also represent a golden opportunity for modern medicine: detecting them in a patient is a telltale sign of a tumor.
They're tough to find, though. In a billion blood cells, there might be just one circulating tumor cell that could trip an alarm.
The enzyme-free detection system is based on the electrochemical properties of Fe3O4 nanoparticles, which since 2007 have been known to mimic the peroxide-reducing capacity of horseradish peroxidase. Wang's team was surprised to find that the nanoparticles could also catalyze the electrochemical reduction of small dye molecules, such as thionine, even in the absence of peroxide.
Wang and his team recently reported in the Journal of the American Chemical Society how they decorated Fe3O4 beads with bimetallic nanocages to create a hybrid electrocatalyst. Circulating tumor cells that were trapped onto an electrode surface with cell-targeting aptamers were detected by cyclic voltammetry of thionine. The system had a wide linear response range and a detection limit down to just a few cells.
There's still a long way to go to get a device into the clinic, but Wang can see the potential of the sturdy inorganic nanoprobes.
"We can actually quantify the biomarkers expressed on cancer cells, and because the expression levels on the cancer cells are quite different from the normal cells, we can actually identify the cancer cells," he says. "Since the sensitivity is really high, if you have low-abundance cancer cells in the body, we should be able to detect them."
INFORMATION: END
Finding a few foes among billions of cellular friends
New technique can detect just a handful of tumor cells
2014-02-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
ETC International College's English Plus Courses Helping Students Learn Other Activities
2014-02-26
ETC International College, that has been helping students to improve their English Language Skills for Business and other areas since 1989, now adds English Plus Courses to its curriculum. By enrolling onto these courses, students can learn and improve other areas of their interests along with General or Business English skills.
The current range of Plus courses available at the Bournemouth-based Language Training Center are: English plus tennis, horse riding, dancing, golf, photography, and alternative therapies.
"We realize that, apart from learning English, ...
Source Health Labs Announces The Release Of A Video Detailing Their Natural Pain Relief Spray
2014-02-26
Source Health Labs launched a brand-new video available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvM3FOZtREU, showing effective ways by which having natural pain relief ingredients incorporated into a spray, the medication can be used quickly in any situation. The goal is to show how with a spray, a persistent discomfort victim can still delight in everyday tasks without being inconvenienced with having to use strong scented creams.
The first concern asked was just how the video was advantageous. Source Health Labs media personnel, Jason Oglow, described that individuals who ...
Novel blood screen reveals risk of dying among healthy people
2014-02-26
A new screening technology reveals a signature of mortality in blood samples.
Researchers have identified four biomarkers that help to identify people at high risk of dying from any disease within the next five years.
Researchers from Finland and Estonia have discovered novel biological markers that are strongly indicative of risk of dying from any disease within the near future. Blood samples from over 17 000 generally healthy people were screened for more than a hundred different biomolecules. The health status of these study volunteers was followed for several years. ...
Brainstem discovered as important relay site after stroke
2014-02-26
Around 16,000 people in Switzerland suffer a stroke every year. Often the result of a sudden occlusion of a vessel supplying the brain, it is the most frequent live-threatening neurological disorder. In most cases, it has far-reaching consequences for survivors. Often the stroke sufferers have to cope with handicaps and rehabilitation is a long process. The brain does, however, have a "considerable capacity for regeneration" explains Lukas Bachmann from the Brain Research Institute of the University of Zurich. As member of Professor Martin Schwab's research team, he found ...
More intensive radiotherapy is better than less for localized prostate cancer
2014-02-26
A radiotherapy regime involving higher doses of radiation is a better option than having lower doses for men with localised prostate cancer, the 10-year results of the largest trial of its kind have shown.
Having 37 rounds, or fractions, of radiotherapy at 74 Gray (Gy) – compared with 32 fractions at 64 Gy – controlled the disease more effectively and reduced the chance that men would need follow-up hormone-deprivation therapy, which can have long-term side-effects.
The findings, published in The Lancet Oncology today (Wednesday), come from the major RT01 phase III ...
Skin cancer risk may have driven evolution of black skin
2014-02-26
Early humans may have evolved black skin to protect against a very high risk of dying from ultraviolet light (UV)-induced skin cancer, a new analysis concludes.
Skin cancer has usually been rejected as the most likely selective pressure for the development of black skin because of a belief that it is only rarely fatal at ages young enough to affect reproduction.
But a new paper, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, cites evidence that black people with albinism from parts of Africa with the highest UV radiation exposure, and where humans first evolved, almost ...
Smithsonian scientists solve 'sudden death at sea' mystery
2014-02-26
Mass strandings of whales have puzzled people since Aristotle. Modern-day strandings can be investigated and their causes, often human-related, identified. Events that happened millions of years ago, however, are far harder to analyze—frequently leaving their cause a mystery. A team of Smithsonian and Chilean scientists examined a large fossil site of ancient marine mammal skeletons in the Atacama Desert of Northern Chile—the first definitive example of repeated mass strandings of marine mammals in the fossil record. The site reflected four distinct strandings over time, ...
Brain cell activity regulates Alzheimer's protein
2014-02-26
Increased brain cell activity boosts brain fluid levels of a protein linked to Alzheimer's disease, according to new research from scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
Tau protein is the main component of neurofibrillary tangles, one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease. It has been linked to other neurodegenerative disorders, including frontotemporal dementia, supranuclear palsy and corticobasal degeneration.
"Healthy brain cells normally release tau into the cerebrospinal fluid and the interstitial fluid that surrounds them, but ...
SMA unveils how small cosmic seeds grow into big stars
2014-02-26
New images from the Smithsonian's Submillimeter Array (SMA) telescope provide the most detailed view yet of stellar nurseries within the Snake nebula. These images offer new insights into how cosmic seeds can grow into massive stars.
Stretching across almost 100 light-years of space, the Snake nebula is located about 11,700 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellation Ophiuchus. In images from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope it appears as a sinuous, dark tendril against the starry background. It was targeted because it shows the potential to form many massive ...
Follow-up care for older breast cancer survivors needs to be all-encompassing
2014-02-26
Older women who have overcome breast cancer are likely to struggle with heart disease, osteoporosis and hypertension further on in their lives. Whether these conditions occur or not is influenced by the treatment that patients received to fight cancer, their overall weight and their age. Breast cancer survivors therefore should watch their weight and get regular exercise so that they can enjoy a high quality of life. These findings, by lead author Nadia Obi of the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, who collaborated with the group of Prof. Chang-Claude from the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Charge radius of Helium-3 measured with unprecedented precision
Oral microbiota transmission partially mediates depression and anxiety in newlywed couples
First vascularized model of stem cell islet cells
US excess deaths continued to rise even after the COVID-19 pandemic
Excess US deaths before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic
Millions of HealthCare.gov participants face coverage loss due to burdensome reenrollment policies, according to new research
Study: DNA test detects three times more lung pathogens than traditional methods
Modulation of antiviral response in fungi via RNA editing
Global, regional, and national burden of nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage
Earliest use of psychoactive and medicinal plant ‘harmal’ identified in Iron Age Arabia
Nano-scale biosensor lets scientists monitor molecules in real time
Study shows how El Niño and La Niña climate swings threaten mangroves worldwide
Quantum eyes on energy loss: diamond quantum imaging for next-gen power electronics
Kyoto conundrum: More hotels than households exist in ancient capital
Cluster-root secretions improve phosphorus availability in low-phosphorus soil
Hey vespids, what's for dinner? DNA analysis of wasp larvae’s diverse diet
Street smarts: how a hawk learned to use traffic signals to hunt more successfully
Muscle quality may hold clues to early cognitive decline
Autophagy and lysosomal pathways orchestrate unconventional secretion of Parkinson’s disease protein
Mystery of “very odd” elasmosaur finally solved: one of North America’s most famous fossils identified as new species
Half the remaining habitat of Australia's most at-risk species is unprotected
Study reveals influence behind illegal bear bile consumption in Việt Nam
Satellites offer new view of Chesapeake Bay’s marine heat waves
Experimental drug may benefit some patients with rare form of ALS
Early testing could make risky falls a thing of the past for elderly people
A rule-breaking, colorful silicone that could conduct electricity
Even weak tropical cyclones raise infant mortality in poorer countries, USC-led research finds
New ketamine study promises extended relief for depression
Illinois physicists develop revolutionary measurement tool, exploiting quantum properties of light
Moffitt to present plenary and late-breaking data on blood, melanoma and brain metastases at ASCO 2025
[Press-News.org] Finding a few foes among billions of cellular friendsNew technique can detect just a handful of tumor cells