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

DNA origami guides new possibilities in the fight against pancreatic cancer

2025-04-22
(Press-News.org) CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — One of the challenges of fighting pancreatic cancer is finding ways to penetrate the organ’s dense tissue to define the margins between malignant and normal tissue. A new study uses DNA origami structures to selectively deliver fluorescent imaging agents to pancreatic cancer cells without affecting normal cells.

The study, led by University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign mechanical science and engineering professor Bumsoo Han and professor Jong Hyun Choi at Purdue University, found that specially engineered DNA origami structures carrying imaging dye packets can specifically target human KRAS mutant cancer cells, which are present in 95% of pancreatic cancer cases.

“This research highlights not only the potential for more accurate cancer imaging, but also selective chemotherapy delivery, a significant advancement over current pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma treatments,” said Han, who is also affiliated with the Cancer Center at Illinois. “The current process of cancerous tissue removal through surgical resection can be improved greatly by more accurate imaging of tumor margins.”

The findings of the study are published in the journal Advanced Science.

DNA is a long double-stranded molecule, making it an ideal candidate for folding into nanoscale scaffolds that hold molecules — in this case, fluorescent imaging dyes — in place and to create new, synthetic molecular structures.

The team developed pancreatic cancer models using 3D printed “tumoroids” and microfluidic systems that mimic the complex tumor microenvironment — called microfluidic tumor-stroma models — to reduce the reliance on animal tissue and accelerate translation to clinical use in humans. To test the uptake of the origami structures in cancerous tissues, the researchers added the dye-packed DNA structures to the tumor models and tracked their movement with fluorescence imaging. They then administered the dye-delivering structures to mice with human pancreatic tumor tissue to explore the distribution of the DNA origami packets in more physiologically relevant conditions.

The team experimented with different sizes of tube and tile-shaped DNA origami molecules. They found that tube-shaped structures about 70 nanometers in length and 30 nanometers in diameter, as well as ones that are about 6 nanometers in length and 30 nanometers in diameter, experienced the greatest uptake by the pancreatic cancer tissue while not being absorbed by the surrounding noncancerous tissue. Larger tube-shaped molecules and all sizes of tile-shaped molecules did not perform as well.

“We were surprised to see how drastically the variation in size and shape of the DNA origami packets influenced uptake by cancer cells versus healthy cells,” Han said. “I thought that smaller would be better, so that there would be more accumulation, but it looks like there is a certain sweet spot for not just size but also shape.”

The next step is to explore the use of origami-folded DNA molecules loaded with chemotherapy drugs for selective delivery to cancer cells without affecting normal cells, Han said. “Doing so with engineered tumor models to reduce animal use and accelerate translation in drug discovery is another direction we are very proud of.”

This research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. Han also is affiliated with the bioengineering, the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, the Materials Research Laboratory and the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology.

 

Editor’s note:   

To reach Bumsoo Han, email bumsooh@illinois.edu.

The paper “DNA origami-cyanine nanocomplex for precision imaging of KRAS-mutant pancreatic cancer cells” is available online. DOI: 10.1002/advs.202410278

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health grants U01 HL143403, R01 CA254110, U01 CA274304, UM1TR004402, P30 CA023168 and the National Science Foundation grant MCB-2134603.

Mechanical science and engineering is part of The Grainger College of Engineering at Illinois.   

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

PREPSOIL launches assessment tool for soil living lab and lighthouse initiatives

2025-04-22
This tool is specifically designed to assess how well your initiative aligns with the EU Mission: A Soil Deal for Europe (Mission Soil) criteria for Soil Living Labs and Lighthouses, as further defined by the PREPSOIL taxonomy.  Should your initiative meet the necessary criteria, you will be invited to participate in a more detailed assessment developed by the SOILL-Startup project. This next phase will provide an opportunity to join a network of 100 Soil Living Labs and ...

Lebanon crisis driving parents to seek unregulated “shadow” education, study shows

2025-04-22
Political and social crisis in Lebanon has forced parents to seek unregulated “shadow” education for their children, a new study shows. The government’s ongoing neglect of public education is intensifying social inequality, experts have warned. The current sectarian power-sharing arrangement has led to a diminished focus on schools, fostering privatization. The study shows how upheavals in Lebanon have exacerbated educational challenges for families across all socioeconomic groups, leading to an increasing reliance on the unregulated shadow education sector, particularly private ...

The AGA Research Foundation awards $2.4 million in digestive health research funding

2025-04-22
Bethesda, MD (April 22, 2025) — The American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) is proud to announce the selection of 74 recipients to receive $2.4 million in research funding through the annual AGA Research Foundation Awards Program. AGA also announces today the addition of 10 pilot grants, totaling $400,000 in funding, to the 2026 awards portfolio to ensure that scientific discovery continues despite federal funding cuts. “Since we established the AGA Research Foundation in 1984, AGA has been unwavering in the commitment to supporting ...

A repurposed anti-inflammatory drug may help treat alcohol use disorder and related pain

2025-04-22
LA JOLLA, CA—A preclinical study from scientists at Scripps Research finds that a drug already FDA-approved for treating inflammatory conditions may help reduce both alcohol intake and pain sensitivity—two issues that commonly co-occur with alcohol use disorder (AUD). The results, published in JCI Insight on April 22, 2025, suggest that the drug apremilast—a phosphodiesterase-4 (PDE4) inhibitor, or a compound that blocks an enzyme involved in inflammation—could be repurposed as a dual-acting therapy for AUD, particularly in individuals who have pain during and after alcohol use. AUD ...

Obesity disrupts “reaction time” to starvation in mice

2025-04-22
Researchers led by Keigo Morita and Shinya Kuroda of the University of Tokyo have revealed a temporal disruption in the metabolism of obese mice when adapting to starvation despite no significant structural disruptions in the molecular network. This is a breakthrough discovery as research including the temporal dimension in biology has been notoriously laborious and extracting systematic insight from big data has been difficult. Thus, this study paves the way for further research into more general metabolic processes, such as food intake and disease progression. The findings were published in the journal Science Signaling. Living beings need to continuously extract energy from “food” ...

Listening to an avatar makes you more likely to gamble

2025-04-22
Expecting feedback from an avatar compared to a real human facilitates risk-taking behavior in a gambling task, and a brain region called the amygdala is central to this facilitation, according to a study published April 22nd in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Toshiko Tanaka and Masahiko Haruno from the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan. In virtual-reality environments, individuals can adopt various forms of avatars, projecting their behaviors into a virtual realm where their interaction partners also appear as avatars. With this shift in ...

Facial expressions of avatars promote risky decision-making

2025-04-22
Highlights - Humans take more risks when interacting with facial expressions shown on avatars rather than real human faces. - This shift in risk-taking behavior is linked to activity in the amygdala. - The findings offer new insights into both the advantages and the cautionary aspects of communication via avatars.   Abstract A research team led by Dr. TANAKA Toshiko and Dr. HARUNO Masahiko at the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT, President: TOKUDA Hideyuki Ph.D.), investigated how avatar-mediated communication affects human decision-making. They ...

PREPSOIL Final Event: Facilitating the deployment of the Mission Soil across European regions

2025-04-22
Monday May 26, 2025, key stakeholders from across Europe will gather in Brussels at the Committee of the Regions for the PREPSOIL Final Event, marking a major step in advancing soil  health policies and practices. The event will bring together policy-makers, researchers, and civil society representatives to discuss how the objectives of the Mission Soil and the proposed Soil  Monitoring Law may be supported and implemented at regional and local scale across EU Member States and the role that regional and local actors can play in promoting ...

Politecnico di Milano: a study in Earth’s future on agrivoltaics reducing the competition between food and energy

2025-04-22
Can agriculture and solar energy work together instead of competing? A study led by Maddalena Curioni, Nikolas Galli, Giampaolo Manzolini and Maria Cristina Rulli, researchers in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Department of Energy at the Politecnico di Milano, sheds new light on the potential of agrivoltaics. Published in the prestigious journal Earth’s Future, the paper analyses how the coexistence of photovoltaic panels and agricultural crops can help solve the global conflict over land use. With the growing demand for renewable energy and the need to produce increasing amounts of food, the pressure on arable land is intensifying. ...

Listeners use gestures to predict upcoming words

2025-04-22
In face-to-face conversations, speakers use hand movements to signal meaning. But do listeners actually use these gestures to predict what someone might say next? In a study using virtual avatars, scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics and Radboud University in Nijmegen show that listeners used the avatar’s gestures to predict upcoming speech. Both behavioural and EEG data indicated that hand gestures facilitate language processing, illustrating the multimodal nature of human communication. People might wiggle their fingers when they talk about typing, depicting a ‘typing’ movement. Seeing meaningful hand movements—also called iconic gestures—helps ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Could we use eye drops instead of reading glasses as we age?

Patients who had cataracts removed or their eyesight corrected with a new type of lens have good vision over all distances without spectacles

AI can spot which patients need treatment to prevent vision loss in young adults

Half of people stop taking popular weight-loss drug within a year, national study finds

Links between diabetes and depression are similar across Europe, study of over-50s in 18 countries finds

Smoking increases the risk of type 2 diabetes, regardless of its characteristics

Scientists trace origins of now extinct plant population from volcanically active Nishinoshima

AI algorithm based on routine mammogram + age can predict women’s major cardiovascular disease risk

New hurdle seen to prostate screening: primary-care docs

MSU researchers explore how virtual sports aid mental health

Working together, cells extend their senses

Cheese fungi help unlock secrets of evolution

Researchers find brain region that fuels compulsive drinking

Mental health effects of exposure to firearm violence persist long after direct exposure

Research identifies immune response that controls Oropouche infection and prevents neurological damage

University of Cincinnati, Kent State University awarded $3M by NSF to share research resources

Ancient DNA reveals deeply complex Mastodon family and repeated migrations driven by climate change

Measuring the quantum W state

Researchers find a way to use antibodies to direct T cells to kill Cytomegalovirus-infected cells

Engineers create mini microscope for real-time brain imaging

Funding for training and research in biological complexity

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: September 12, 2025

ISSCR statement on the scientific and therapeutic value of human fetal tissue research

Novel PET tracer detects synaptic changes in spinal cord and brain after spinal cord injury

Wiley advances Knowitall Solutions with new trendfinder application for user-friendly chemometric analysis and additional enhancements to analytical workflows

Benchmark study tracks trends in dog behavior

OpenAI, DeepSeek, and Google vary widely in identifying hate speech

Research spotlight: Study identifies a surprising new treatment target for chronic limb threatening ischemia

Childhood loneliness and cognitive decline and dementia risk in middle-aged and older adults

Parental diseases of despair and suicidal events in their children

[Press-News.org] DNA origami guides new possibilities in the fight against pancreatic cancer