Researchers have discovered a method that allows for the controlled 
release of an active agent on the basis of a magnetic nanovehicle. The 
research, conducted as part of the National Research Programme "Smart 
Materials" (NRP 62), opens up new possibilities for the development of 
targeted treatments, which are more efficient and trigger fewer side 
effects.
Certain drugs are toxic by nature. For example, anti-cancer drugs 
developed to kill diseased cells also harm healthy ones. To limit the 
side effects of chemotherapy, it would be a great step forward if it 
were possible to release a drug only in the affected area of the body. 
In the context of the National Research Programme "Smart Materials" (NRP
 62) -- a cooperation between the SNSF and the Commission for Technology
 and Innovation (CTI) -- researchers of ETH Lausanne, the Adolphe Merkle
 Institute and the University Hospital of Geneva have discovered a 
method that might represent an important step towards the development of
 an intelligent drug of this kind. By combining their expert knowledge 
in the areas of material sciences, biological nanomaterials and 
medicine, they were able to prove the feasibility of using a nanovehicle
 to transport drugs and release them in a controlled manner.
This nanocontainer is a liposome, which takes the shape of a vesicle.
 It has a diameter of 100 to 200 nanometers and is 100 times smaller 
than a human cell. The membrane of the vesicle is composed of 
phospholipids and the inside of the vesicle offers room for the drug. On
 the surface of the liposome, specific molecules help to target 
malignant cells and to hide the nanocontainer from the immune system, 
which might otherwise consider it a foreign entity and seek to destroy 
it. Now the researchers only needed to discover a mechanism to open up 
the membrane at will.
Nano effect This is exactly what the researchers succeeded in doing 
(*). How they did it? By integrating into the liposome membrane 
superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPION), which only become 
magnetic in the presence of an external magnetic field. Once they are in
 the field, the SPION heat up. The heat makes the membrane permeable and
 the drug is released. Researchers proved the feasibility of such a 
nanovehicle by releasing in a controlled manner a coloured substance 
contained in the liposomes. "We can really talk of nanomedicine in this 
context because, by exploiting superparamagnetism, we are exploiting a 
quantum effect which only exists at the level of nanoparticles," 
explains Heinrich Hofmann of the Powder Technology Laboratory of EPFL. 
SPION are also an excellent contrast agent in magnetic resonance imaging
 (MRI). A simple MRI shows the location of the SPION and allows for the 
release of the drug once it has reached the targeted spot.
Designed for medical practice "To maximise the chances of discovering
 an effective treatment, we focused on nanocontainers, which would be 
readily accepted by doctors," adds Heinrich Hofmann. This strategy 
limits the range of possibilities. Liposomes, which are already used in a
 number of drugs on the market, are composed of natural phospholipids 
which can also be found in the membranes of human cells. To open them 
up, researchers focused on SPION, which had already been the subject of 
numerous toxicological studies. More efficient materials were ignored 
because little or nothing was known about their effects on humans. In 
terms of shape, another important parameter of magnetism, they chose to 
use only spherical nanoparticles, which are considered safer than 
fibrous shapes. The intensity and frequency of the magnetic field needed
 to release the active agent are compatible with human physiology.
The combination of these parameters presented the researchers with 
another challenge: to reach a temperature sufficiently high to open up 
the liposomes, they were forced to increase the size of the SPION from 6
 to 15 nanometres. The membrane of the vesicles has a thickness of only 
4-5 nanometres. Then the masterstroke: the research group of Alke Fink 
at the Adolphe Merkle Institute was able to regroup the SPION in one 
part of the membrane (*). This also made MRI detection easier. Before 
starting in-vivo tests, the researchers aim to study the integration of 
SPION into the liposome membrane in greater detail.
National Research Programme "Smart Materials" (NRP 62) NRP 62 is a 
cooperation programme between the Swiss National Science Foundation 
(SNSF) and the Commission for Technology and Innovation (CTI). It 
strives to promote scientific excellence and contribute to the 
successful industrial exploitation of smart materials and their 
applications. NRP 62 intends to combine the expertise and resources of 
various research institutions across Switzerland. The researchers will 
devise the technologies needed for the development of smart materials 
and for their application in intelligent systems and structures. NRP 62 
consists of 21 projects of use-inspired fundamental research. It has a 
budget of CHF 11 million and ends in 2015.
Journal Reference:
- Cécile Bonnaud, Dimitri Vanhecke, Davide Demurtas, Barbara Rothen-Rutishauser, Alke Petri-Fink. Spatial SPION Localization in Liposome Membranes. IEEE Transactions on Magnetics, 2013; 49 (1): 166 DOI: 10.1109/TMAG.2012.2219040
 
Courtesy: ScienceDaily 

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