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DNA Ferrying Na**particles Turbocharge Cancer Immu**therapy
[IMG]http://www.medgadget.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/na**vaccine.jpg[/IMG] At the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB), a part of the National Institutes of Health, scientists have developed a “na**vaccine” for safer delivery of immu**therapies. DNA strings need to be carefully introduced near the target in order to activate the immune system to kill nearby Cancer cells, but enzymes easily break them up if the delivery is poorly focused. The team used DNA sequences obtained from bacteria, called*unmethylated cytosine-guanine oligodeoxynucleotides (CpG), which have previously been trialed by injecting them directly into tumors. The body recognizes them as foreign and mounts a immune response, but additionally they help the immune system remember how to fight back against same kind of tumors near where the CpG was delivered. The problem is CpG doesn’t stay inside the tumor long e**ugh to work as intended, which is why NIBIB researchers worked on encapsulating them inside a safe delivery vehicle. [IMG]http://www.medgadget.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/na**vaccine-up-close.jpg[/IMG]Magnified image of nan**vaccine complexes showing flower-like structure. Each complex is about a micron in diameter, which is equivalent to 1/100 the thickness of a human hair. Image taken with a scanning electron microscope and colored purple. Called*DNA-i**rganic hybrid na**vaccines (hNVs), these particles contain multiple CpG DNA strings in a flowery shape that make them easy for the immune cells to grab onto. The size of the particles can be varied so that they can easily enter a tumor while sticking around longer without being washed away. The team tested these on mice with mela**ma and showed that the nNVs **t only stayed inside the tumor much longer than naked CpG molecules, but also that mice treated with nNVs responded much better to the immu**therapy. More from NIBIB: In addition to boosting the immune response induced by CpGs, the hNVs also reduced side effects associated with administration of CpG by decreasing the amount of CpG that leaked out of the tumor and into the bloodstream. One indication of the side effects of CpG Immu**therapy is an enlarged spleen. The researchers showed that mice injected with hNVs had spleens that weighed nearly half as much as mice injected with CpG molecules.Study in journal*Na**scale: DNA-i**rganic hybrid na**vaccine for cancer immu**therapy… Via:*NIBIB… This post DNA Ferrying Na**particles Turbocharge Cancer Immu**therapy appeared first on Medgadget. ??????? ??????: DNA Ferrying Na**particles Turbocharge Cancer Immu**therapy || ??????: rss || ??????: اسم منتداك
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