'Nanostar' Particles Make Cancer Cells Light Up

A schematic representation of the nanostar particle.
A schematic representation of the nanostar particle. (Image credit: Dr. Moritz Kircher, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York)

Finding cancer cells might one day involve shining a laser onto a certain region of the body, and watching the cancerous cells light up.

Researchers have developed a new type of nanoparticle that they call "nanostars," which accumulate in tumor cells and scatter light, making the tumors easy to see with a special camera.

The particles are each about 140 nanometers (0.000005 inches) across, and consist of eight-point gold stars that are surrounded by a layer of dye and encased in a sphere of silica and a polymer. The researchers' method of making the stars ensures that all of the particles are nearly identical, which is important because earlier efforts to make such nanoparticles weren't able to produce the consistent shapes needed, said Dr. Moritz Kircher, a molecular imaging specialist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.

That regular star shape is important because it scatters light in a particular way, Kircher said. When a laser hits one of the nanostars, most of the light scatters with the same amount of energy. But a small number of photons – about 1 in 10 million -- scatter with less energy, because they give up some to the chemical bonds in the dye that coats the gold stars, changing the way the dye looks under the laser light. [10 Technologies That Will Transform Your Life]

Ordinarily, it would be difficult to see the change in the light, but the gold amplifies it enough so that cameras can see it, Kircher told Live Science. The nanoparticles can't enter noncancerous cells in the body, so only the cancer cells light up.

To test their invention, the researchers looked at mice that were genetically engineered so that they were very likely to develop cancer, and injected them with the nanostars.

The particles spread thorough the bloodstreams of the mice, and built up in the cancerous cells. The researchers then put the mice on a stage and used an infrared laser to scan each mouse. The researchers found that the nanoparticles caused bright spots where cancer cells — and even precancerous cells — were hiding.

"In normal organ, muscle or fat [cells], they don't leave the bloodstream," he said. Cancerous cells have larger pores in the blood vessels that nourish them, allowing the nanoparticles through.

Kircher said seeing the precancerous cells light up under the laser was a bit of a surprise, but it was important because it uncovered a similarity between precancerous cells and tumor cells that researchers had suspected existed, but hadn't seen. It was thought precancerous cells also develop the larger pores, like cancer cells. But nobody had observed them in enough detail. Because the nanostars were bright enough to show the precancerous cells, this is evidence that they also have larger pores in their blood vessels.

The nanostars could be important in treating people with cancers in which the dangerous cells are sometimes hard to see, such as liposarcoma, a cancer that arises in fat cells. "You go in, and open up the abdomen, say, and see all that fat," Kircher said. "You see some streaks that look abnormal, but don't know where [edges] of the tumor are. So doctors either have to take out all of the tissue that might possibly contain cancer, or risk leaving some cancerous cells in the body."

These new nanoparticles would show where the dangerous cells are, and make the surgery a lot more precise, he said.

There are other benefits over earlier efforts, Kircher said. The nanostars are non-specific — they don't need to be custom-made for each type of cancer. Earlier experiments with nanoparticles often required them to be built to order, coated with proteins that would link to specific types of cancer cells.

But before these nanoparticles get to the clinic there is still work to be done testing their toxicity, which will require animal studies, he said.

"This is really good work concerning nanotechnology and it's application," said Andrey Kuzmin, professor of physics at the Institute for Lasers, Photonics and Biophotonics at the State University of New York at Buffalo, who was not involved in the research. Kuzmin's team has also done extensive work on nanoparticles. He added that the use of the star shape was new, as most previous gold nanoparticles were more like rods.

The work appears in today's (Jan. 21) issue of Science Translational Medicine.

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Jesse Emspak
Live Science Contributor
Jesse Emspak is a contributing writer for Live Science, Space.com and Toms Guide. He focuses on physics, human health and general science. Jesse has a Master of Arts from the University of California, Berkeley School of Journalism, and a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Rochester. Jesse spent years covering finance and cut his teeth at local newspapers, working local politics and police beats. Jesse likes to stay active and holds a third degree black belt in Karate, which just means he now knows how much he has to learn.