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Plastic antibody works in first tests in living animals
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Plastic Antibody Works in First Tests in Living Animals

ScienceDaily (June 9, 2010) — Scientists are reporting the first evidence that a plastic antibody -- an artificial version of the proteins produced by the body's immune system to recognize and fight infections and foreign substances -- works in the bloodstream of a living animal.

The discovery, they suggest in a report in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, is an advance toward medical use of simple plastic particles custom tailored to fight an array of troublesome "antigens."

Those antigens include everything from disease-causing viruses and bacteria to the troublesome proteins that cause allergic reactions to plant pollen, house dust, certain foods, poison ivy, bee stings and other substances.

In the report, Kenneth Shea, Yu Hosino, and colleagues refer to previous research in which they developed a method for making plastic nanoparticles, barely 1/50,000th the width of a human hair, that mimic natural antibodies in their ability to latch onto an antigen. That antigen was melittin, the main toxin in bee venom. They make the antibody with molecular imprinting, a process similar to leaving a footprint in wet concrete. The scientists mixed melittin with small molecules called monomers, and then started a chemical reaction that links those building blocks into long chains, and makes them solidify. When the plastic dots hardened, the researchers leached the poison out. That left the nanoparticles with tiny toxin-shaped craters.

Their new research, together with Naoto Oku's group of the University Shizuoka Japan, established that the plastic melittin antibodies worked like natural antibodies. The scientists gave lab mice lethal injections of melittin, which breaks open and kills cells. Animals that then immediately received an injection of the melittin-targeting plastic antibody showed a significantly higher survival rate than those that did not receive the nanoparticles. Such nanoparticles could be fabricated for a variety of targets, Shea says. "This opens the door to serious consideration for these nanoparticles in all applications where antibodies are used," he adds.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Chemical Society, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Hoshino et al. Recognition, Neutralization, and Clearance of Target Peptides in the Bloodstream of Living Mice by Molecularly Imprinted Polymer Nanoparticles: A Plastic Antibody. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2010; 132 (19): 6644 DOI: 10.1021/ja102148f
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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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Quicklinks:
- 200908090819234651- 200807080714094109- Detecting Flu Viruses In Remote Areas Of The World- read more- 201006100621141026- World's First Plastic Antibodies in Live Organisms: Stop Spread of Bee Venom in Mice- read more- Scientists Identify DNA That Regulates Antibody Production- read more- Memory Improved by Stimulating Key Site in Brain- January 2012 Fourth Warmest in Contiguous U.S.- Directing the Immune System to Attack Cancer- Gene Therapy for Inherited Blindness- Sound Can Activate 'Seeing' for the Blind- 'Stealth Merger' of Dwarf Galaxies- Milky Way's Black Hole Munches Asteroids- Lull in Ship Noise Eases Stress On Whales- Plastics In Oceans Decompose, Release Hazardous Chemicals, Surprising New Study Says- 200807080714094109- Detecting Flu Viruses In Remote Areas Of The World- read more- 201006100621141026- World's First Plastic Antibodies in Live Organisms: Stop Spread of Bee Venom in Mice- read more- Scientists Identify DNA That Regulates Antibody Production- read more- Memory Improved by Stimulating Key Site in Brain- January 2012 Fourth Warmest in Contiguous U.S.- Directing the Immune System to Attack Cancer- Gene Therapy for Inherited Blindness- Sound Can Activate 'Seeing' for the Blind- 'Stealth Merger' of Dwarf Galaxies- Milky Way's Black Hole Munches Asteroids- Lull in Ship Noise Eases Stress On Whales- read more- 200807080714094109- Detecting Flu Viruses In Remote Areas Of The World- read more- 201006100621141026- World's First Plastic Antibodies in Live Organisms: Stop Spread of Bee Venom in Mice- read more- Scientists Identify DNA That Regulates Antibody Production- read more- Memory Improved by Stimulating Key Site in Brain- January 2012 Fourth Warmest in Contiguous U.S.- Directing the Immune System to Attack Cancer- Gene Therapy for Inherited Blindness- Sound Can Activate 'Seeing' for the Blind- 'Stealth Merger' of Dwarf Galaxies- Milky Way's Black Hole Munches Asteroids- Lull in Ship Noise Eases Stress On Whales