We reach more than 65,000 registered users in Dec!! Register Now

Nanorobot with hidden weapon kills cancer cells
- July 27, 2024
- 4 Views
- 0 Likes
- 0 Comment
Researchers at Karolinska Institutet have developed nanorobots that kill cancer cells in mice. The robot’s weapon is hidden in a nanostructure and is exposed only in the tumour microenvironment, sparing healthy cells. The study is published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

“This hexagonal nanopattern of peptides becomes a lethal weapon,” explains Professor Björn Högberg at the Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, who led the study. “If you were to administer it as a drug, it would indiscriminately start killing cells in the body, which would not be good. To get around this problem, we have hidden the weapon inside a nanostructure built from DNA.”
Created a ‘kill switch’
The art of building nanoscale structures using DNA as a building material is called DNA origami and is something Björn Högberg’s research team has been working on for many years. Now they have used the technique to create a ‘kill switch’ that is activated under the right conditions.“We have managed to hide the weapon in such a way that it can only be exposed in the environment found in and around a solid tumour,” he says. “This means that we have created a type of nanorobot that can specifically target and kill cancer cells.”
The key is the low pH, or acidic microenvironment that usually surrounds cancer cells, which activates the nanorobot’s weapon. In cell analyses in test tubes, the researchers were able to show that the peptide weapon is hidden inside the nanostructure at a normal pH of 7.4, but that it has a drastic cell-killing effect when the pH drops to 6.5.
Reduced tumour growth
They then tested injecting the nanorobot into mice with breast cancer tumours. This resulted in a 70 per cent reduction in tumour growth compared to mice given an inactive version of the nanorobot.
The researchers also plan to investigate whether it is possible to make the nanorobot more targeted by placing proteins or peptides on its surface that specifically bind to certain types of cancer.
The research was funded by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, the European Research Council (ERC), the Swedish Research Council and the Academy of Finland. The invention will be patented.
Publication
”A DNA Robotic Switch with Regulated Autonomous Display of Cytotoxic Ligand Nanopatterns”, Yang Wang, Igor Baars, Ieva Berzina, Iris Rocamonde-Lago, Boxuan Shen, Yunshi Yang, Marco Lolaico, Janine Waldvogel, Ioanna Smyrlaki, Keying Zhu, Robert A Harris, Björn Högberg, Nature Nanotechnology, online 1 July 2024, doi: 10.1038/s41565-024-01676-4.Researchers at Karolinska Institutet have developed nanorobots that kill cancer cells in mice. The robot’s weapon is hidden in a nanostructure and is exposed only in the tumour microenvironment, sparing healthy cells. The study is published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
List of Referenes
- Yang Wang, Igor Baars, Ieva Berzina, Iris Rocamonde-Lago, Boxuan Shen, Yunshi Yang, Marco Lolaico, Janine Waldvogel, Ioanna Smyrlaki, Keying Zhu, Robert A. Harris, Björn Högberg. A DNA robotic switch with regulated autonomous display of cytotoxic ligand nanopatterns. Nature Nanotechnology, 2024; DOI: 10.1038/s41565-024-01676-4
Cite This Article as
No tags found for this post