Target Practice in Purple
Target Practice in Purple
This image, captured by Omar Khan and Edmond Zaia, shows nanoparticles delivering siRNA to the cytoplasm of cervical tumor cells.
Koch Institute at MIT, MIT Department of Chemical Engineering, Institute of Medical Engineering and Science
Omar F. Khan, Edmond W. Zaia
Langer and Anderson Laboratories
MIT Koch Institute
How can we turn off the genes that promote the development of cancer? Using specially designed nanoparticles as genetic patches engineers can deliver customized payloads to a cell’s gel-like cytoplasm, where most cellular activity occurs, and mitigate the effects of cancer-causing genes in the cell’s nucleus.
This image shows nanoparticles (red) in the cytoplasm of cervical tumor cells (green). As researchers learn more about how cells respond to these therapies, they will continue to tweak the patches to determine which distributions of synthetic and genetic material can best target different types of cancer.