Purdue University researchers have reproduced portions of the female breast in a tiny slide-sized model dubbed "breast on-a-chip" that will be used to test nanomedical approaches for the detection and treatment of breast cancer.
The model mimics the branching mammary duct system, where most breast cancers begin, and will serve as an "engineered organ" to study the use of nanoparticles to detect and target tumor cells within the ducts.
Sophie Lelièvre, associate professor of basic medical sciences in the School of Veterinary Medicine, and James Leary, SVM Professor of Nanomedicine and professor of basic medical sciences in the School of Veterinary Medicine and professor of biomedical engineering in the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, led the team.
"Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women in most countries, and in the U.S. alone nearly 40,000 women lost their lives to it this past year," said Lelièvre, who is associate director of discovery groups in the Purdue Center for Cancer Research and a leader of the international breast cancer and nutrition project in the Oncological Sciences Center. "We've known that the best way to detect this cancer early and treat it effectively would be to get inside the mammary ducts to evaluate and treat the cells directly, and this is the first step in that direction."
Lelièvre and Leary hope eventually to be able to introduce magnetic nanoparticles through openings in the nipple, use a magnetic field to guide them through the ducts where they would attach to cancer cells and then reverse the magnetic field to retract any excess nanoparticles.
The nanoparticles could carry contrast agents to improve mammography, fluorescent markers to guide surgeons or anticancer agents to treat the cancer, Leary said.
"Nanoparticles can be designed to latch on to cancer cells and illuminate them, decreasing the size of a tumor that can be detected through mammography from 5 millimeters to 2 millimeters, which translates into finding the cancer 10 times earlier in its evolution," Leary said. "There also is great potential for nanoparticles to deliver anticancer agents directly to the cancer cells, eliminating the need for standard chemotherapy that circulates through the entire body causing harmful side effects."
Physicians have tried to access the mammary ducts through the nipple in the past, injecting fluid solutions to try to wash out cells that could be examined and used for a diagnosis of cancer. However, this approach could only reach the first third of the breast due to fluid pressure from the ducts, which branch and become smaller and smaller as they approach the glands that produce milk, Leary said.
"The idea is that nanoparticles with a magnetic core can float through the naturally occurring fluid in the ducts and be pulled by a magnet as opposed to being pushed with pressure," he said. "We think they could reach all the way to the back of the ducts, where it is believed most breast cancers originate. Of course, we are only at the earliest stages and many tests need to be done."
Such tests could not be done using standard models that grow cells across a flat surface in a plastic dish, so the team created the artificial organlike model in which living cells line a three-dimensional replica of the smallest portions of the mammary ducts.
Leary is internationally known for his nanofabrication work using photolithography to build tiny, precise structures on thin pieces of silicon to create high-speed cell sorting and analysis tools. He used the same techniques to build a mold of branching channels out of a rubberlike material called polydimethylsiloxane. The channels are about 5 millimeters long of various diameters from 20 microns to 100 microns, roughly the diameter of a human hair, that match what is found near the end of the mammary duct system.
Lelièvre, whose group is one of the few in the world able to successfully grow the complicated cells that line the mammary ducts, coaxed the cells to grow within the mold and behave as they would within a real human breast.
"The cells within the breast ductal system have a very specific organization that has proven difficult to obtain in a laboratory," Lelièvre said. "The cells have different sides, and one side must face the wall of the duct and the other must face the inner channel. Reproducing this behavior is very challenging, and it had never been achieved on an artificial structure before."
The team coated the mold in a protein-based substance called laminin 111 as a foundation for the cells that allows them to attach to the mold and behave as they would inside the body, Lelièvre said.
Because injecting the delicate cells into the finished channels of the mold caused too much damage, the team created a removable top for the channels.
"The design of the U-shaped channels and top was necessary for us to be able to successfully apply the cells, but it also allows us to make changes quickly and easily for different tests," Lelièvre said. "We can easily introduce changes among the cells or insert a few tumor cells to test the abilities of the nanoparticles to recognize them. The design also makes it very easy to evaluate the results as the entire model fits under a microscope."
A paper detailing the team's work, which was funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, is published in the current issue of Integrative Biology. In addition to Lelièvre and Leary, co-authors include graduate student Meggie Grafton, research associate Lei Wang and postdoctoral researcher Pierre-Alexandre Vidi.
The team has demonstrated that nanoparticles can be moved within the bare channels of the mold filled with fluid, but has not yet moved nanoparticles through the finished model lined with living cells, Lelièvre said.
The team next plans to create and test nanoparticles with a slippery surface that will prevent them from sticking to the cells as they travel through the channels and coatings that contain antibodies to target and attach to specific types of cancerous and precancerous cells, she said.
"Although we are at the very beginning stages of this work, we are hopeful that this nanomedical approach will one day save lives and provide patients with an easier road to recovery," Lelièvre said. "The successful creation of this model is an important milestone in this work and it is a testament to what can be accomplished through multidisciplinary research."
Lelièvre and Leary are both members of the Purdue Center for Cancer Research and the Oncological Sciences Center. Leary also is a member of the Birck Nanotechnology Center and Bindley Bioscience Center at Purdue's Discovery Park.
Writer: Elizabeth K. Gardner, 765-494-2081, ekgardner@purdue.edu
Sources: Sophie Lelièvre, 765-496-7793, lelievre@purdue.edu
James Leary, 765-494-7280, jfleary@purdue.edu
James Leary
jfleary@purdue.edu
765-494-7280
A leading researcher advancing efforts in thermoelectric energy conversion at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has been...
Read Full Story
Researchers are developing a new type of computer memory that could be faster than the existing commercial memory and use far...
Read Full Story
Alexandra Boltasseva, a Purdue University assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, has been named one of the...
Read Full Story
A team of Purdue University researchers is among a small group in the world that has successfully created ultrapure material...
Read Full Story
Researchers are developing new technologies that combine a laser and electric fields to manipulate fluids and tiny particles...
Read Full Story
A developer of drug-delivery devices based in the Purdue Research Park is competing against nine other entrepreneurial teams...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University researchers recently took their miniature mass spectrometer grocery shopping to test...
Read Full Story
Researchers have developed a method for creating single-crystal arrays of a material called graphene, an advance that opens up...
Read Full Story
PITTSBURGH, June 2, 2011 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -Purdue University researchers have completed large-scale tests to verify the...
Read Full Story
For the second consecutive year, top high school students will travel to Purdue University to participate June 5-17 in the ninth...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - The U.S. State Department is selecting Purdue University to lead one of six U.S.-China EcoPartnerships...
Read Full Story
On May 10, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will deliver opening remarks at a signing ceremony for six new U.S.-China...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Leading bioenergy industry experts, researchers and government officials from the United States and Brazil...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University is forming two joint laboratories with China's Beihang University to focus on low emissions...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University distinguished professor of agronomy and World Food Prize laureate Gebisa Ejeta has received...
Read Full Story
When a physician is treating a patient in an intensive care unit, nurses are more than partners. They're also human safety checklists...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue doctoral student Benjavan Upatising thinks she can make a difference in assisting those with chronic...
Read Full Story
NEXTRANS Center director, Dr. Srinivas Peeta, and research associate, Dr. Sushant Sharma, will present Wednesday, April 6, 2011...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A Purdue University biochemist has demonstrated a process using nanotechnology to better assess whether...
Read Full Story
The fascinating, tiny world of nanotechnology will take center stage during the second annual NanoDays on April 15 and 16 at...
Read Full Story
This meeting has been rescheduled from April 22 to May 13 in MANN 203 at 11:30 a.m. The Energy Center will host a pizza lunch...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A company developing a nanocomposite bone substitute claimed the $30,000 top prize Friday (March 25) in...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University researchers have collaborated with scientists at General Atomics to create safe and...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - An international nuclear weapons specialist will speak at Purdue University this week about the potential...
Read Full Story
West Lafayette, Ind. - Purdue University researchers are leading a program for Indiana's rural high school teachers that encourages...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A prominent researcher who has studied the environmental impact of last year's massive oil spill will...
Read Full Story
LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A northern Indiana county has approved changes to an ordinance to allow louder wind turbines despite some residents'...
Read Full Story
Award-winning NPR science correspondent Richard Harris addressed a standing-room-only crowd at Purdue University on Feb. 3 as...
Read Full Story
The 6th annual Frontiers in Bioenergy Symposium is quickly approaching on May 15-18, 2011. Registration will soon be open.
Read Full Story
Researchers are developing a new type of biological and chemical sensor that has few moving parts, is low-cost and yet highly...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue's Board of Trustees on Friday (Feb. 4) permitted the university to pursue leasing land as part...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A Purdue University researcher is proposing development of a new cross-disciplinary approach for analyzing...
Read Full Story
The Daily Planet interviewed Greg Shaver and has a wonderful story on the fuel and flexible control efforts at Herrick Laboratories...
Read Full Story
Purdue University is considering a partnership with private companies to develop a 60-turbine wind farm in northern Tippecanoe...
Read Full Story
Researchers are developing a new class of "plasmonic metamaterials" as potential building blocks for advanced optical technologies...
Read Full Story
The NEXTRANS Center, a Region V Regional University Center headquartered at Purdue University, and NAVTEQ will collaborate on...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers have reproduced portions of the female breast in a tiny slide-sized model dubbed "breast on-a-chip"...
Read Full Story
In mid-May, NPR first reported that the government was grossly underestimating the size of the BP oilspill in the Gulf of Mexico...
Read Full Story
Every Friday, Purdue Today's "Did You Know?," a new feature, will explore unusual, unique and fascinating details that make this...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University scientists have found the last undiscovered gene responsible for the production of the...
Read Full Story
Researchers are creating a new type of solar cell designed to self-repair like natural photosynthetic systems in plants by using...
Read Full Story
Dr. Pengcheng Zhang's Ph.D. dissertation, "A Generalized Modeling Framework to Analyze Interdependencies Among Infrastructure...
Read Full Story
The Birck Nanotechnology Center and Energy Center are pleased to invite Purdue Faculty to an afternoon workshop in the Burton...
Read Full Story
Purdue and General Electric will unveil an electric vehicle charging station on campus today (Dec. 13) with a new Chevrolet Volt...
Read Full Story
The second NEXTRANS Indiana High School Essay Competition will conclude this Friday, December 10, 2010.
Read Full Story
Discovery Park's Visions of Discovery received a Gold award as best individual website or section and will be recognized at the...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers are working with General Motors to build thermoelectric generators, which produce an electric current...
Read Full Story
Researchers are creating a system that harvests heat from an engine's exhaust to generate electricity, reducing a car's fuel...
Read Full Story
Earlier this fall, a team of UT scientists traveled to Beijing for the fourth annual workshop of the China-US Joint Research...
Read Full Story
Please save the date on Friday, December 3, 2010 from 8:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. at attend this discussion on the IUPUI campus.
Read Full Story
Professor Aaron Ciechanover, the 2004 Nobel laureate in chemistry, will speak at Purdue University as part of the Honeywell Nobel...
Read Full Story
The age of personalized medicine has arrived. One day soon, a person's genetic makeup may be able to help doctors better detect...
Read Full Story
Researchers have developed a method that uses aluminum and a liquid alloy to extract hydrogen from seawater to run engines in...
Read Full Story
Purdue University and several Colombian agencies have signed an agreement establishing the Colombia-Purdue Institute for Advanced...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Swift Enterprises Ltd. has entered into an agreement that will allow Purdue University researchers to...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - How the local Gulf of Mexico community recovers from the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill will depend on...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - More than 30,000 hours of underwater videos of the failed Deepwater Horizon oil drill platform in the...
Read Full Story
Longtime Purdue agricultural economics professor Otto Doering has been named director of the Purdue Climate Change Research Center...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University and three other U.S. universities have announced a multiyear partnership aimed at strengthening...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. Experts know nutrition is a common link in breast cancer, and a team led by Purdue University researchers...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. Breast cancer prevention and nutrition will be the focus during an Oct. 18 and 19 symposium at Purdue...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Award-winning NPR correspondent Richard Harris, global industry safety expert Deborah Grubbe and congressional...
Read Full Story
Arun Majumdar to speak on Energy Innovations in the 21st Century: Role of ARPA-E
Read Full Story
When Purdue University students Cody Ward, Sean Smith and Arjun Bhasin applied for the Interns for Indiana program, they had...
Read Full Story
Purdue University biomedical engineering professor Alyssa Panitch has been named the first faculty entrepreneur-in-residence...
Read Full Story
Purdue University's Center for the Environment and the Chinese Academy of Sciences are forming a five-year partnership focused...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers have developed a new type of pump for drug-delivery patches that might use arrays of "microneedles"...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University is part of a research consortium led by Pennsylvania State University to develop technologies...
Read Full Story
Penn State researchers will receive $129 million over the next five years from several federal sources, including the Department...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University researchers have developed a technology that has the potential to more quickly identify...
Read Full Story
Researchers have overcome a fundamental obstacle in using new "metamaterials" for radical advances in optical technologies, including...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Studies by a Purdue University-led team have revealed a potential marker for prostate cancer that could...
Read Full Story
Purdue biological sciences professor Maureen McCann will become the next director of the Energy Center, the university's center...
Read Full Story
Purdue University will lead a new research center to improve photovoltaic solar cells as part of a national effort to bring alternative...
Read Full Story
APS Colloquium, Argonne National Lab
3 PM August 4, 2010
Read Full Story
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. - Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC), the worlds leading university-research consortium for...
Read Full Story
WASHINGTON, DC, April 26, 2010 - Today, a new 501(c) 3 organization named Professors Beyond Borders was launched during a half-day...
Read Full Story
Chemical engineers at Purdue University have developed a new method to process agricultural waste and other biomass into biofuels...
Read Full Story
A team of scientists and engineers, including Purdue University mechanical engineering professor Steven Wereley, released figures...
Read Full Story
The Discovery Learning Research Center has selected the research team of Rachael Kenney and Melanie Shoffner for its 2010 Faculty...
Read Full Story
Purdue University President France A. Córdova will meet with the leaders of two Chinese universities to enhance collaborative...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers will join Midwest colleagues and industry leaders on campus May 24 and 25 to discuss advancements...
Read Full Story
UniSA is bringing five distinguished international researchers to Adelaide under a new program to boost research collaborations...
Read Full Story
If the fundamental economics of supply and demand are any guide, Purdue University's Interns for Indiana program continues to...
Read Full Story
New research findings suggest that an experimental ultrasensitive medical imaging technique that uses a pulsed laser and tiny...
Read Full Story
Join Shell and Purdue for a series of discussions that will explore energy sustainability, the future of energy, and the challenges...
Read Full Story
Spring started with a bang for physicists as particles collided at a world-record energy during an international experiment that...
Read Full Story
On April 1st, VACCINEs David Ebert was the guest speaker at the Anti Terrorism Advisory Council (ATAC) meeting for the Northern...
Read Full Story
Purdue University's Healthcare Technical Assistance Program has named Monica Arrowsmith director of a new center to help Indiana...
Read Full Story
Researchers have completed work on a crucial component for an experimental hydrogen storage system for cars, part of efforts...
Read Full Story
Richard Cosier is trading his role as dean of Krannert School of Management to become the Avrum and Joyce Gray Director of the...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers have developed a miniature device capable of converting ultrafast laser pulses into bursts of radio-frequency...
Read Full Story
Longtime Purdue University professor James Cooper has been named interim director of the Birck Nanotechnology Center, a Discovery...
Read Full Story
An interactive Web site called nanoHUB.org, which makes available scientific simulations, seminars, interactive courses and other...
Read Full Story
Student-led companies that develop consumer products from the byproducts of ethanol production and a tissue-healing technology...
Read Full Story
Purdue's Oncological Sciences Center and the Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center will share a five-year, $1...
Read Full Story
A Purdue University scientist has shown man-made changes to the landscape have affected Indian monsoon rains, suggesting that...
Read Full Story
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Two top Purdue University administrators have been named to lead the university's Burton D. Morgan Center...
Read Full Story
Purdue University is participating in Global Entrepreneurship Week from Nov. 16-22 to celebrate the role that entrepreneurs play...
Read Full Story
GlucaGo LLC, a life sciences company led by a trio from Purdue and Indiana universities, captured the 2009 Global Idea to Product...
Read Full Story
Researchers at Purdue University have discovered a new approach for repairing damaged nerve fibers in spinal cord injuries using...
Read Full Story
Purdue University on Monday (Nov. 9) will kick off a national center to develop specialized software to help homeland security...
Read Full Story
Eight finalists have been selected to compete for $100,000 on Nov. 10 at the sixth Purdue University Life Sciences Business Plan...
Read Full Story
Edit: Deadline has been extended to November 9, 2009
The 23rd Annual Burton D. Morgan Business Plan...
Read Full Story
An Indo-US Joint Conference on "Infectious Diseases: Novel Strategies for Design & Development of Vaccines and Drugs", Jan 5-8...
Read Full Story
Researchers have overcome a major obstacle in efforts to use tiny structures called carbon nanotubes to create a new class of...
Read Full Story
Sawyer Sparks, the creator of Soy-Yer Dough, a gluten-free modeling compound, was one of the entrepreneurs selected this season...
Read Full Story
The Indiana Advanced Electric Vehicle Training and Education Consortium will develop certificate and associate degree programs...
Read Full Story
Purdue researchers have created magnetically responsive gold nanostars that may offer a new approach to biomedical imaging.
Read Full Story
Friday, Jun. 26, 2009
The Truant Monsoon: Why India Is Worried
By Madhur Singh / New Delhi
The bad news for India is scrawled...
Read Full Story
A simulation of electrical current moving through a futuristic electronic transistor has been modeled atom-by-atom in less than...
Read Full Story
Researchers are making progress in creating digital transistors using a material called graphene, potentially sidestepping an...
Read Full Story
Researchers have created and tested miniature devices that are implanted in tumors to generate oxygen, boosting the killing power...
Read Full Story
A new tool developed by nuclear engineers at Purdue University will be hitched to an experimental fusion reactor at Princeton...
Read Full Story
Robert and Anne Burnett Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Vlad Shalaev has been appointed as Scientific Director...
Read Full Story
John R. Weaver, facility manager at Purdue University's Birck Nanotechnology Center, has been named a recipient of the 2011 Monroe...
Read Full Story
Researchers have overcome a fundamental obstacle in developing breath-analysis technology to rapidly diagnose patients by detecting...
Read Full Story
Researchers have invented a technique that uses inexpensive paper to make "microfluidic" devices for rapid medical diagnostics...
Read Full Story
Researchers have overcome a fundamental obstacle in developing breath-analysis technology to rapidly diagnose patients by detecting...
Read Full Story
Purdue University has been awarded $1.5 million to study quantum information science, a new field paving the way for quantum...
Read Full Story
Purdue University and several Colombian agencies have signed an agreement establishing the Colombia-Purdue Institute for Advanced...
Read Full Story
Nearly 800 papers were submitted for consideration and presentations from Dr. Ian Buckle, University of Nevada, Reno, NEES Research...
Read Full Story
A biosensor utilizing black platinum and carbon nanotubes developed at Purdue University will help give scientists a better understanding...
Read Full Story
A new technology enabling tiny machines called micro electromechanical systems to "self-calibrate" could make possible super-accurate...
Read Full Story
Researchers have shown that an advanced cooling technology being developed for high-power electronics in military and automotive...
Read Full Story
Nine top Purdue University graduate students at the Birck Nanotechnology Center will form the inaugural class in the Discovery...
Read Full Story
Purdue University researchers have developed a miniature device capable of converting ultrafast laser pulses into bursts of radio-frequency...
Read Full Story
An interactive Web site called nanoHUB.org, which makes available scientific simulations, seminars, interactive courses and other...
Read Full Story
A new approach in the design of miniature, insectlike robots could lead to "microids" the size of ants that move their tiny legs...
Read Full Story
Heart failure patients with higher health literacy are more likely to engage in self-care behaviors. Funded by an RCHE seed grant...
Read Full Story
Two Purdue graduate students have developed sampling kits and educational materials for three Native Alaskan villages as part...
Read Full Story
Indiana is the second largest recipient of grant funding, and it's a perfect example of what this will mean. You've got Purdue...
Read Full Story
Following the successful spring 2009 conference, National Priorities and Goals, the Regenstrief Center for Healthcare Engineering...
Read Full Story
Assistive technology innovators, educators, investors, and users are invited to attend the Center for Assistive Technology Entrepreneurs'...
Read Full Story