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Fourth Asan-HMI symposium highlights nanotechnology
Two of the most promising and controversial areas of research,
nanotechnology and stem cells, shared the stage at a June symposium in
Seoul, Korea, showing international progress and directions for the near
future.
The Fourth Asan–HMI Joint International Symposium, titled “Nanotechnology
in Biology and Medicine,” focused on promising areas of drug design
and delivery, nano-based diagnostics and therapies, tissue engineering, “lab-on-a-chip” devices,
and genomics. Hosted at Asan Medical Center and organized jointly by
Asan and Harvard Medical International, the symposium drew experts from
Korea
and the United States.
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| Lynn Jelinksi: Nanotechnology has the potential to “change the
quality of the human condition.” |
In her keynote address, Lynn Jelinski, a chemist, former
Cornell professor, and now president of Sunshine Consultants International
in Florida, said
that nanotechnology and genomics are “definitely going to change the
quality of the human condition.” One of nanotechnology’s attractions
is that nanoscale clusters of molecules have different physical properties,
as in conductivity, strength, and optical transport, than the same material
on a bulk scale. So it is possible to develop novel circuits and to find
new uses for familiar substances. Jelinski explained that in 2000, the
World Technology Evaluation Center (sponsored by multiple federal research
agencies)
projected that the worldwide impact of nanotechnology by 2015 would top
a trillion dollars per year.
But gaps in our knowledge remain. “Do we understand the toxicity of
nanostructures?” Jelinski asked. Not entirely. She said it is up to
scientists to examine the real dangers and to develop public understanding
of the technology to avoid a backlash similar to that against genetically
modified food and other organisms.
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| Mehmet Toner: Exploring the impact of nanosystems on tissue engineering. |
Framing the situation of nanotechnology vis-à-vis
the public, Mehmet Toner, professor of biomedical engineering at Massachusetts
General Hospital
(MGH) and Harvard Medical School and director of the Microsystems Bioengineering
Laboratory at MGH, said that nanotech seems to have a relative lack of
support and understanding in the public mind.
Further confusion surrounds the prefix nano. Strictly speaking, nano
refers to billionths of a meter, and nanotechnology applies to methods of
manipulating objects 100 nanometers or smaller in size. But few people speak
strictly about the nano scale. What is important is that nanotechnology
enables intervention on the scale at which biological systems actually operate.
Tissue engineering
One of the aspects of nanotech that Toner addressed was the impact of
nanosystems on tissue engineering. The field makes use of microfabrication
techniques to produce functional tissue in both two and three dimensions.
Toner described studies in which tiny engineered surfaces, some with
islands of binding or nonbinding molecules, control cell shape and differentiation. “Cell
shape can … regulate stem cell lineage commitment,” Toner said,
suggesting an area where nanotech and stem cell research may converge
for generating certain adult cells for medical applications.
Lab-on-a-Chip
Small, portable lab-on-a-chip and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS)
devices can also combine molecular, cellular, and fluidic analyses for applications
like diagnosis at the point of care and work in drug discovery.
Since lab-on-a-chip and MEMS techniques are well established, reliable,
and economical, the chips are amenable to use in poorer countries. The devices
can be made for cents, Toner said, and they are still very accurate.
As the CEO of Digital Bio Technology in Korea, Jun-Keun Chang is developing
lab-on-a-chip and other devices for world markets. Also an assistant
professor of electrical engineering and computer science at Seoul National
University,
Chang presented at the conference, describing fluidics-based devices
that enable single-molecule and single-cell manipulation and detection. “We
can look into multiple events within living cells simultaneously by real-time
monitoring and fluorescence measurement at the single-cell level,” he
said. Chang said that lab-on-a-chip devices like his could potentially
be used prenatally, replacing amniocentesis with a noninvasive blood
test.
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| Peter Park: Looking for relationships between genomic data from microarrays
and patient data, in order to predict patient survival based on molecular
profiles. |
All of these tiny-tech instruments and approaches generate
data, but in many cases, methods for gleaning reliable information from
it prove
to be inadequate. Peter Park, instructor in pediatrics at Children's
Hospital, Boston and associate director of bioinformatics at the Harvard
Medical
School–Partners
Center for Genetics and Genomics, is devising statistical and computational
methods for interpreting data from a variety of high-throughput technologies
like microarrays, genomic sequences, and protein–protein interactions.
One of his interests is finding relationships between genomic data from
microarrays and patient data, in order to develop methods for predicting
patient survival based on molecular profiles. Microarray studies still
have bugs, Park said, which prevent them from being used for clinical
care. A
major problem is a lack of agreement among studies for the same disease.
Drug delivery
One particularly promising area of nanotechnology is drug delivery. Nanotech
devices for delivering drugs have numerous advantages over their macroscale
counterparts, said Nicholas Peppas, the Fletcher S. Pratt chair of engineering
at the University of Texas, Austin. He spoke about an investigation he is
involved in that is the first successful in vitro study of oral delivery
of interferon-beta 1a, used for multiple sclerosis.
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| Nicholas Peppas: Nanotech devices offer numerous
advantages in the area of drug delivery. |
The study tested oral delivery of peptides and proteins, including interferon-beta
1a, through a hydrogel carrier. Engineered on a nano scale and composed
of crosslinked polymers, the pH-sensitive hydrogels incorporated the drug
and then released it at variable rates, depending on the pH of the surrounding
environment. The research suggests that these nanoparticle carriers may
protect drugs from being broken down in the body until they can reach the
small intestines.
Underscoring the promise of engineered technologies to deliver medications,
Sang-Yoon Kim, professor of otolaryngology at Asan Medical Center and
its teaching affiliate, the University of Ulsan College of Medicine,
presented his work on microspheres loaded with all-trans-retinoic acid
(atRA) to
treat
head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, an aggressive epithelial malignancy.
Clinical application of atRA is limited due to retinoid resistance and
toxicity. His team’s study showed that unlike daily oral doses, biodegradable
microspheres that were injected under the skin maintained plasma concentration
of the drug in the therapeutic range for a long period.
Looking into the future, Peppas said that these and other technologies
may be used to construct smart diagnostic and therapeutic systems. He
visualizes giving people an injection containing microparticles or nanospheres,
which
have been imprinted to recognize disease-associated compounds like glucose,
angiotensin, and cholesterol. The “stealth” particles would
circulate in the blood, and when they recognized an enemy compound, would
capture it, and through biodegradation, trigger the release of an appropriate
therapeutic drug.
Stem cell controls
In his work on the natural systems that regulate adult hematopoietic
stem cells, David Scadden, professor of medicine at MGH and HMS, co-director
of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute (see Forum), and director of the Center
for Regenerative Medicine and Technology at MGH, has identified for the
first time elements of the microenvironment that control the behavior of
mammalian stem cells. He and his colleagues discovered that mineral components
are important to stem cell localization; matrix components are important
to constraint of stem cells; and bone-forming osteoblasts, to the support
and proliferation of stem cells.
More specifically, Scadden commented that the calcium-sensing receptor,
located on the surface of hematopoietic stem cells and other cells, is
critical to stem cells finding their niche. If stem cells are in an environment
of
low ionic calcium, the receptor is downregulated. “In the blood bank,
that’s exactly the way we store stem cells,” Scadden said. “So,
in fact, our method of storage may be working against us … We are
now working with the blood bankers to see if methods of storage can be
used which could possibly change this expression and enhance engraftment.”
Mi-Jung Kim, an assistant professor of laboratory medicine at the Asan
Institute for Life Sciences, University of Ulsan College of Medicine,
also is investigating hematopoietic stem cells to improve their therapeutic
value.
Kim has conducted recent studies on the integration and proliferation
of transplanted bone marrow cells in the recipient ’s body.
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| Mitchell Spellman: “These lectures and the
promise and the power of nanotechnology have already or will very
soon obliterate or obscure the distinction between what we’ve
called pure science and applied science.” |
Promise and power
The symposium was opened by Kun-Choon Park, president of Asan Medical
Center and professor of surgery at the University of Ulsan College of
Medicine, who said that nanotechnology “can lead via improved biodevices
to a better quality of life, improved wealth creation, and a stronger
base for our new knowledge-based economy.”
In closing the conference, Mitchell Spellman, director
of academic alliances and international exchange programs at HMI, described
a paradigm shift
put in motion by work at the nano scale, the level at which biological
systems function. “These lectures and the promise and the power of nanotechnology
have already or will very soon obliterate or obscure the distinction between
what we’ve called pure science and applied science,” he said.
Robert K. Crone, president and CEO of HMI, pointed out that each Asan-HMI
symposium has been multicultural and multidisciplinary. “Each event
has been a learning experience for the faculty as well as the audience,
enabling even those who are experienced in their subject to look at their
research from a different perspective.”
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