PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Antibiotic nanoparticles attack respiratory infection and reduce drug side effects

2015-03-13
(Press-News.org) Estoril, Portugal: Treating respiratory disease is often difficult because drugs have to cross biological barriers such as respiratory tissue and mucosa, and must therefore be given in large quantities in order for an effective amount to reach the target. Now researchers from Germany, Brazil and France have shown that the use of nanoparticles to carry antibiotics across biological barriers can be effective in treating lung infections. Doing so allows better delivery of the drug to the site of infection, and hence prevents the development of antibiotic resistance which may be caused by too large and continued doses of antibiotic. Additionally, such a strategy might help to overcome the rapid metabolism and excretion of the antibiotic from the body, which happens when it is administered by traditional routes, either orally or intravenously. Describing her team's work to the 13th European Respiratory Society Lung Science Conference in Estoril today (Friday), Dr Cristiane Carvalho-Wodarz, from the Helmholtz Institute for Pharmaceutical Research, Saarbrücken, Germany, will say that, by developing nanoparticles loaded with clarithromycin, an antibiotic commonly used in the treatment of respiratory infections, they have been able to mimick the process that occurs after inhalation in vivo by delivering the drug through aerosol deposition to lung cells. Nanoparticles, which are in the same size range as a virus - millions of times smaller than a tennis ball - were prepared by adding a biodegradable polymer oil, stabiliser and clarithromycin dissolved in solvents, to an aqueous surfactant solution. Subsequently, the solvents were completely removed. "The delivery of nanoparticles in this way enables their deposition in cells cultivated in vitro in a similar way to the deposition in vivo, which take place in the alveoli (air sacs found in the respiratory tract)," Dr Carvalho-Wodarz will say. The researchers used the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus as the model for their experiment, since it is one of the major causes of hospital-acquired infection and also plays a crucial role in the lung infections which are common in the genetic disorder cystic fibrosis. The tiny clarithromycin nanoparticles (CLARI-NPs), were able to access the bacteria located either in biofilms (cells sticking to each other on a surface) or inside individual lung cells. "Neither of these locations is conducive to effective drug delivery through traditional routes," says Dr Carvalho-Wodarz, "so we were pleased to see that not only did the use of CLARI-NPs allow the uptake of the antibiotic by the lung cells, but also that there were no toxic effects on all the cell types on which we tested." To date the work has been in vitro, using human bronchial cells. The researchers now hope to evaluate its effectiveness in an animal model, probably mice. They would also like to test the same nanoparticles loaded with other drugs used against lung infections, and in particular those in which the infectious agent becomes drug-resistant after the continued large doses that may be required. "Using nanoparticles to deliver drugs to a local site of infection is a promising strategy for overcoming side effects, increasing treatment efficacy, and overcoming resistance. The nanoparticles we have developed have a number of advantages as drug carriers; they do not provoke a toxic effect, they are highly stable, they release the drug over a sustained period, and they can overcome cellular barriers. We believe that our formulation shows promise to improve the antibacterial efficacy which could help patients with lung infections, since the antibiotic can reach the infection site directly and therefore decrease the side effects we see during traditional routes of administration," Dr Carvalho-Wodarz will conclude.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Chronic kidney disease may increase certain risks during pregnancy

2015-03-12
Highlights Among pregnant women, the risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes--such as preterm delivery or the need for neonatal intensive care--increased across stages of chronic kidney disease. The risks of intrauterine death or fetal malformations were not higher in women with chronic kidney disease. An estimated 26 million people in the United States have chronic kidney disease. Washington, DC (March 12, 2015) -- Even mild kidney disease during pregnancy may increase certain risks in the mother and baby, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of ...

New evidence that increasing economic inequality rises out of political partisanship

2015-03-12
BUFFALO, N.Y. - Political scientists at the University at Buffalo and Pennsylvania State University have published new research investigating how partisan differences in macroeconomic policy have contributed to substantial and rising economic inequality in the United States. The negative consequences of such policy decisions, researchers found, have a greater impact on people at the lower end of the economic spectrum, but are "significantly more muted" for those at the higher end of the spectrum. The study, "Partisan Differences in the Distributional Effects of Economic ...

Building a genomic GPS

2015-03-12
WORCESTER, MA - A new "app" for finding and mapping chromosomal loci using multicolored versions of CRISPR/Cas9, one of the hottest tools in biomedical research today, has been developed by scientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. This labeling system, details of which were published in PNAS and first presented at the American Society for Cell Biology/International Federation for Cell Biology annual meeting in Philadelphia in December, could be a key to understanding the spatial and temporal regulation of gene expression by allowing researchers to measure ...

E-cigarette advertising makes one crave ... tobacco?

2015-03-12
Television advertisements for e-cigarettes may be enticing current and even former tobacco smokers to reach for another cigarette. That is the finding by researchers Erin K. Maloney, Ph.D. and Joseph N. Cappella, Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School for Communication, as reported in the journal Health Communication (online, March 2015). The researchers studied more than 800 daily, intermittent, and former smokers who watched e-cigarette advertising, and who then took a survey to determine smoking urges, intentions, and behaviors. Using a standard ...

NASA's Hubble observations suggest underground ocean on Jupiter's largest moon

NASAs Hubble observations suggest underground ocean on Jupiters largest moon
2015-03-12
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has the best evidence yet for an underground saltwater ocean on Ganymede, Jupiter's largest moon. The subterranean ocean is thought to have more water than all the water on Earth's surface. Identifying liquid water is crucial in the search for habitable worlds beyond Earth and for the search of life as we know it. "This discovery marks a significant milestone, highlighting what only Hubble can accomplish," said John Grunsfeld, associate administrator of NASA's Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters, Washington. "In its 25 years ...

Toddlers in trouble

2015-03-12
CHICAGO --- A father's depression during the first years of parenting - as well as a mother's - can put their toddler at risk of developing troubling behaviors such as hitting, lying, anxiety and sadness during a critical time of development, according to a new Northwestern Medicine study. This is one of the first studies to show that the impact of a father's depression from postpartum to toddlerhood is the same as a mother's. Previous studies have focused mostly on mothers with postpartum depression and found that their symptoms may impact their children's behavior during ...

Unique proteins found in heat-loving organisms attach to plant matter

2015-03-12
Unique proteins newly discovered in heat-loving bacteria are more than capable of attaching themselves to plant cellulose, possibly paving the way for more efficient methods of converting plant matter into biofuels. The unusual proteins, called tapirins (derived from the Maori verb 'to join'), bind tightly to cellulose, a key structural component of plant cell walls, enabling these bacteria to break down cellulose. The conversion of cellulose to liquid biofuels, such as ethanol, is paramount to the use of renewable feedstocks. In a paper published online in the Journal ...

New protocol can help emergency departments evaluate patients with acute chest pain

2015-03-12
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - March 12, 2015 - A recently developed risk-evaluation protocol can help hospital emergency department personnel more efficiently determine which patients with acute chest pain can be sent home safely, according to a randomized trial conducted at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. The study, published in the current online issue of the American Heart Association journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, found that chest-pain patients who were evaluated with the new protocol, called the HEART Pathway, had 12 percent fewer cardiac tests, ...

Satellite sees rare subtropical storm 90Q in southern Atlantic

Satellite sees rare subtropical storm 90Q in southern Atlantic
2015-03-12
The Brazilian Navy Hydrographic Centre reported that a sub-tropical storm had formed on March 11 near east of the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, the southeastern most state in Brazil. NOAA's GOES-East satellite provided imagery of the Atlantic that showed Subtropical Cyclone 90Q off the southeastern coast of Brazil at 17:45 UTC (1:45 p.m. EDT). The system appeared to have fragmented banding of thunderstorms around the low-level center. The image was created by NASA/NOAA's GOES Project at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. At 1200 UTC (8 ...

Naturally acidic waters of Puget Sound surround UW's Friday Harbor Labs

Naturally acidic waters of Puget Sound surround UWs Friday Harbor Labs
2015-03-12
For more than 100 years, marine biologists at Friday Harbor Laboratories have studied the ecology of everything from tiny marine plants to giant sea stars. Now, as the oceans are undergoing a historic shift in chemistry, the lab is establishing itself as a place to study what that will mean for marine life. And the University of Washington laboratory is uniquely placed in naturally acidic waters that may be some of the first pushed over the edge by human-generated carbon emissions. A paper published last month in Limnology and Oceanography tracks about two years of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A threesome that hatches potato parasites

Young people discover the technologies shaping their future in the World Economic Forum and Frontiers for Young Minds collection

Real-time 3D visualization reveals potent antibacterial and antibiofilm activity against superbacteria

Abnormal uterine bleeding and insulin resistance are on the rise: Is there a connection?

Eye wear breakthrough: MXene-coated lenses for safer and smarter wearables

‘AI scientist’ suggests combinations of widely available non-cancer drugs can kill cancer cells

Phage therapy at a turning point: Global experts converge in Berlin to shape the future of antimicrobial medicine

Low calorie diets linked to heightened risk of depressive symptoms

Bronchiolitis, monoclonal antibody halves hospitalizations of children younger than six months old

Mum’s obesity linked to child’s heightened hospital admission risk for infection

Millions of new solar system objects to be found and ‘filmed in technicolor’ – studies predict

Pitt study has upended decades-old assumptions about brain plasticity

Hertz Foundation partners with Analog Devices to empower future leaders in analog, digital and software technology solutions

Would you hand over your health data if it meant better care?

Study examines how well wearable tech tracks fitness metrics

Dr. Nikolaos Koundouros wins 2025 Tri-Institutional Breakout Award

Low vs. High blood pressure avoidance in non-cardiac surgery: Neurocognitive outcomes unchanged

Telehealth can improve care for cats with chronic health issues

Researchers develop innovative model to study sense of smell

Birds may be drinking on the wing, but in moderation

Collaboration can unlock Australia’s energy transition without sacrificing natural capital

Study identifies proteins involved in the effectiveness of immunotherapy against blood cancer

Cannabis extract could treat fungal diseases

Pancreatic cancer spreads to liver or lung thanks to this protein

Eating an array of smaller fish could be nutrient-dense solution to overfishing

Han studying potential of next generation telepresence

Emory study finds molecular link between air pollution and pregnancy risks

Controlling bacteria with light: from tackling antibiotic resistance to “bacterial robots”

Johns Hopkins study shows how scientists can use black holes as supercolliders

Being incarcerated and living in areas where more have gone to jail is associated with higher death rates

[Press-News.org] Antibiotic nanoparticles attack respiratory infection and reduce drug side effects