A magazine highlighting the latest applications and technological aspects of research across the chemical sciences.
Smart nanospheres recognise dying cells
A team of Chinese and US chemists has developed a set of tri-functional nanospheres that can monitor cell death. The development could pave the way to new biofunctionalised smart nanospheres with biomedical applications.

Nanospheres with protein attachments highlight apoptotic cells |
Fluorescent and magnetic properties are often combined on single nanospheres for use in biomedical fields. Now a team of researchers, led by Dai-Weng Pang from Wuhan University in China, has functionalised such nanospheres to make them capable of isolating cells showing markers of programmed cell death (apoptosis). This can be a useful indicator of several diseases such as AIDS and chronic hepatitis, when excessive apoptosis occurs.
The chemists attached the covalent protein complex annexin V-biotin to the nanospheres via the biotin unit. The annexin V unit was able to recognise the marker phosphatidylserine present on apoptotic cells. The researchers could then isolate the cells using a magnet and monitor them under fluorescent light.
Katherine Vickers
References
G.P. Wang et al, Chem. Commun., 2005, 4276 (DOI: 10.1039/b508075d)
