Engineering Hope in the Fight Against Brain Cancer.


Brain cancer is one of the most devastating diagnoses a person or family can receive.  Bioengineering doctoral candidate Matt Dowling is using new methods  to attack an illness for which there have been few other treatment options than surgery and radiation, and for which there is a high rate of reoccurrence.  His proposal, "Gelatin Nanoparticles Containing Stabilized Vesicles: A Novel Chemotherapuetic Delivery System for Treatment of Malignant Glioma,"  earned him the 2005 Fischell Fellowship in Biomedical Engineering.

Trying to tackle a particular cancer provides Dowling with motivation and focus.  The brain creates a very specific environmental challenge, and influences the design of his solution.  If he is successful, however, others could build on and adapt his methods to other situations and treatments.

Dowling's research centers around vesicles, nanocontainers which form spontaneously in aqueous environments, encapsulating other molecules in their hollow centers.  Our bodies use them  to route nutrients, metabolites and chemical signals within and between cells.  For this reason, scientists have been interested in their potential use as vehicles for targeted drug delivery—the ability to load the vesicles with the appropriate medication, and control where, when and how that medication is released.

Unfortunately, vesicles produced in the laboratory tend to be quickly targeted and "captured" by the macrophages in our immune system when injected into the bloodstream, greatly limiting their ability to reach their destinations.  They are also unstable structures.  Previous research has found the vesicles can be stabilized and spend more time in the bloodstream by coating their surface with a synthetic polymer known as polyethylene glycol (PEG).  To combat glioma, however, Dowling is instead encasing the vesicles in gelatin nanoparticles, a natural polymer.

This is because gelatin nanoparticles have a rare advantage: they are one of the few that can traverse the blood-brain barrier, a tight seal which keeps toxins (including things perceived as toxins, like drugs) out of the brain, and only allows the passage of oxygen and nutrients.  "The idea behind my proposal, says Dowling, "is to further explore the use of gelatin nanoparticles in treatment of brain cancer while adding a significant twist to the strategy: instead of just using the gelatin to carry the drug, it will also be a camouflage which allows a much more versatile drug container, the vesicle, to get into the brain tissue from the blood stream. This could result in an injectable form of therapy for malignant glioma, which would be immensely preferable over brain surgery."

Currently, Dowling is working with cell cultures, studying the conditions under which nanoparticle uptake occurs, and he is also experimenting with what he calls "mothership microcapsules" made out of another natural polymer, chitosan. Like their gelatin counterparts, the chitosan capsules protect the drug-carrying  vesicles, but on a much larger scale: one "mothership" microcapsule may contain hundreds of vesicles.   If ferromagnetic nanoparticles are added to the chitosan-vesicle mix during capsule formation, Dowling has found, they can then be guided to specific locations in the body with an electromagnetic field.  He has also shown that the surface of his microcapsules can easily be joined with antibodies—immune system proteins whose mission is to target and evict specific threats, like viruses; or in this case, cancer cells. This combination may further increase the tumor-targeting capabilities of his drug delivery system. Future work will include translating this system down to the nanoscale and testing its ability to cross the blood-brain barrier.

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