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

Gold nanoparticles more stable by putting rings on them

Gold nanoparticles more stable by putting rings on them
2021-01-21
(Press-News.org) Hokkaido University scientists have found a way to prevent gold nanoparticles from clumping, which could help towards their use as an anti-cancer therapy.

Attaching ring-shaped synthetic compounds to gold nanoparticles helps them retain their essential light-absorbing properties, Hokkaido University researchers report in the journal Nature Communications.

Metal nanoparticles have unique light-absorbing properties, making them interesting for a wide range of optical, electronic and biomedical applications. For example, if delivered to a tumour, they could react with applied light to kill cancerous tissue. A problem with this approach, though, is that they easily clump together in solution, losing their ability to absorb light. This clumping happens in response to a variety of factors, including temperature, salt concentration and acidity.

Scientists have been trying to find ways to ensure nanoparticles stay dispersed in their target environments. Covering them with polyethylene glycol, otherwise known as PEG, has been relatively successful at this in the case of gold nanoparticles. PEG is biocompatible and can prevent gold surfaces from clumping together in the laboratory and in living organisms, but improvements are still needed.

Applied chemist Takuya Yamamoto and colleagues at Hokkaido University, The University of Tokyo, and Tokyo Institute of Technology found that mixing gold nanoparticles with ring-shaped PEG, rather than the normally linear PEG, significantly improved dispersion. The 'cyclic-PEG' (c-PEG) attaches to the surfaces of the nanoparticles without forming chemical bonds with them, a process called physisorption. The coated nanoparticles remained dispersed when frozen, freeze-dried and heated.

The team tested the c-PEG-covered gold nanoparticles in mice and found that they cleared slowly from the blood and accumulated better in tumours compared to gold nanoparticles coated with linear PEG. However, accumulation was lower than desired levels, so the researchers recommend further investigations to fine-tune the nanoparticles for this purpose.

Associate Professor Takuya Yamamoto is part of the Laboratory of Chemistry of Molecular Assemblies at Hokkaido University, where he studies the properties and applications of various cyclic chemical compounds.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Gold nanoparticles more stable by putting rings on them

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

COVID-19, influenza and suicide fuel increase in deaths among ICE detainees

2021-01-21
Thirty-five people have died in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) since April 2018, with a seven-fold increase in deaths even as the average daily population decreased by nearly a third between 2019 and 2020, a new USC study shows. "Potentially preventable causes of death -- including COVID-19 infection, influenza and suicide -- are responsible for at least half of recent deaths," said researcher Sophie Terp, an assistant professor of clinical emergency medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC and a clinical scholar at the USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and ...

Fish sex organs boosted under high-CO2

Fish sex organs boosted under high-CO2
2021-01-21
Research from the University of Adelaide has found that some species of fish will have higher reproductive capacity because of larger sex organs, under the more acidic oceans of the future. Published in PLOS Biology, the researchers say that far from the negative effects expected under the elevated CO2 levels in our oceans predicted for the end of the century, these fish capitalise on changes to the underwater ecosystems to produce more sperm and eggs. They also look after them better, enhancing the chances of reproductive success. "The warming oceans absorb about one-third of the additional CO2 being released into the atmosphere from carbon emissions, causing the oceans to acidify," says lead author Professor Ivan Nagelkerken from the University's Environment ...

Immunology - Functionality of immune cells in early life

2021-01-21
Dendritic cells are a vital component of the innate immune system, which constitutes the body's first line of defense against infectious agents and tumor cells. Their job is to activate the T-cell arm of the adaptive immune system, which confers specific and long-lasting protection against bacterial and viral infections. Dendritic cells engulf and degrade proteins that signal the presence of invasive pathogens. The resulting fragments (antigens) are displayed on their surfaces. T cells bearing the appropriate receptors are then activated to seek out and eliminate the pathogen. Newborns and young children ...

School-made lunch 'better' for children

School-made lunch better for children
2021-01-21
Packing a lunchbox with fruit, sandwiches, and snacks is common practice for most Australian families. But what if there was another way? Flinders University researchers investigating the pros and cons of school-provided lunches say uniform delivery of lunchtime food at school could be a solution to better childhood nutrition and learning in Australia. Flinders Caring Futures Institute deputy director Professor Rebecca Golley says universal school-provided lunch models - a common practice in other countries such as the UK - would involve all children in the ...

New technique to fast-track pain research

New technique to fast-track pain research
2021-01-21
Scientists have for the first time established a sensory neuron model able to mass-reproduce two key sensory neuron types involved in pain sensation, enabling the easy generation of large numbers of the cells to fast-track chronic pain research. In research applications usually sensory neurons need to be isolated from animals. They represent a wide variety of different cell types, making it difficult to collect and isolate large quantities of pain sensing neurons. Using a new technique, researchers at Flinders University have found a way to reproduce millions of the cells, providing ample resources for the simultaneous testing of thousands of samples or potential drug libraries. "Our ...

How clicks on a job platform can reveal bias

2021-01-21
Education, professional skills and experience are the essential criteria for filling a position - or at least that is the expectation. The reality often looks different, as numerous studies have shown. When deciding whether to hire a candidate or not, gender, origin or ethnicity sometimes also play an important role; factors that say little about a candidate's suitability for a job. This type of discrimination violates the principle of equal opportunities. For those affected, this may have long-term disadvantages, such as longer unemployment or lower wages. This is why it is crucial to understand who is discriminated against, and why. The study conducted by Dominik Hangartner (Public Policy Group), Daniel Kopp and Michael Siegenthaler (both KOF Swiss Economic Institute) ...

How cells 'eat' their own fluid components

How cells eat their own fluid components
2021-01-21
Autophagy is a fundamental cellular process by which cells capture and degrade their own dysfunctional or superfluous components for degradation and recycling. Recent research has revealed that phase separated droplets have a range of important functions in cells. An international collaboration between German, Norwegian, and Japanese researchers has unravelled the mechanisms underpinning both how these droplets are captured through autophagy, as well as how droplets can serve as a platform from which structures facilitating cytosolic autophagy arise. Two worlds meet Autophagy[1], a critical intracellular ...

Common pesticides stop bees and flies from getting a good night's sleep

2021-01-21
Just like us, many insects need a decent night's sleep to function properly, but this might not be possible if they have been exposed to neonicotinoid insecticides, the most common form of insecticide used worldwide, suggests research by academics at the University of Bristol. Two studies by scientists at Bristol's Schools of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience and Biological Sciences have shown these insecticides affect the amount of sleep taken by both bumblebees and fruit flies, which may help us understand why insect pollinators are vanishing from the wild. Dr Kiah Tasman, Teaching Associate in the School of Physiology, ...

Study pins down number of Americans with most common form of lupus

2021-01-21
Just over 200,000 Americans suffer from systemic lupus erythematosus, or SLE, a condition in which the body's immune system mistakenly attacks its own healthy tissues, especially joints and skin, a new study shows. Led by a researcher at NYU Grossman School of the Medicine, the study provides the first national estimate of how widespread the autoimmune disease is since the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) set up a half dozen state registries to track the illness more than a decade ago. SLE affects mostly women, can be fatal, and often involves debilitating flare-ups of fatigue and pain that keep nearly ...

Patients in cancer remission at high risk for severe COVID-19 illness

2021-01-21
PHILADELPHIA--Patients with inactive cancer and not currently undergoing treatments also face a significantly higher risk of severe illness from COVID-19, a new study from Penn Medicine published online today in JNCI Cancer Spectrum shows. Past reports have established an increased risk of severe disease and death for sick or hospitalized cancer patients with COVID-19 compared to patients without cancer, but less is known about patients in the general population. The findings underscore the importance of COVID-19 mitigation, like social distancing and mask wearing, and vaccinations for all patients, not just those recently diagnosed or with active disease. "Patients who have cancer need to be careful ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

X-ray flashes from a nearby supermassive black hole accelerate mysteriously

New research highlights trends in ADHD diagnoses

United States dementia cases estimated to double by 2060

“The biggest challenge is lacking public acceptance of wind turbines”

Six-month outcomes in the long-term outcomes after the multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children study

Global prevalence of sexual violence against children

Chances of quitting smoking improve with integrated care, including medication and counseling

From microplastics to macro-impact: KTU expert explains plastic recycling challenges

How does the brain encode pain? Scientists uncover neuronal mechanisms of pain intensity encoding

Study finds opioid pain medications very infrequently prescribed to NFL players

Wrong place, wrong time: Why Zika virus hijacks a protein needed for brain growth

The new age of infrastructure maintenance using data from space

CNIO and CNIC research identifies a key protein for ‘burning’ fat

‘True food’ research database offers rankings for 50,000 processed foods

Mystery solved: how tumor cells die after radiotherapy

Bacterial survival genes uncovered using evolutionary map

Sodium-ion batteries need breakthroughs to compete

Tumor DNA in the blood can predict lung cancer outcome

New study unveils breakthrough in understanding cosmic particle accelerators

Previous experience affects family planning decisions of people with hereditary dementia

Does obesity affect children’s likelihood of survival after being diagnosed with cancer?

Understanding bias and discrimination in AI: Why sociolinguistics holds the key to better Large Language Models and a fairer world 

Safe and energy-efficient quasi-solid battery for electric vehicles and devices

Financial incentives found to help people quit smoking, including during pregnancy

Rewards and financial incentives successfully help people to give up smoking

HKU ecologists reveal key genetic insights for the conservation of iconic cockatoo species

New perspective highlights urgent need for US physician strike regulations

An eye-opening year of extreme weather and climate

Scientists engineer substrates hostile to bacteria but friendly to cells

New tablet shows promise for the control and elimination of intestinal worms

[Press-News.org] Gold nanoparticles more stable by putting rings on them