Daily News logo Newsletter logo   Search News    

Purdue University Researcher's Technology "Listens" to Cancer Cells, Shows Effects of Drug Therapies

  Share This Story

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - A Purdue physicist has created technology to detect motion inside three-dimensional tumor spheroids, which may enhance the pharmaceutical industry's early drug discovery capabilities.

David Nolte has developed Holographic Tissue Dynamics Spectroscopy, a technology that allows researchers to look inside cells using holography and lasers. The technology was highlighted in a letter in the peer-reviewed Journal of Biomedical Optics. The work is done in collaboration with John Turek, professor of basic medical sciences at Purdue.

"This technique measures living motion inside a cell," Nolte said. "We're picking up all the activity and seeing how the cell modifies its activities in response to applied drugs."

The first process used by Nolte's technology is holography, which shows tumor tissue in three dimensions.

"We make digital holograms of the tumor, which can grow up to one millimeter," Nolte said. "This holographic technique using lasers lets us see all the way through the tumor, not just the surface."

The tissue dynamics spectroscopy used in Nolte's technology creates an image that shows changes taking place inside cells.

"After making the hologram, we use spectroscopy to measure the time-dependent changes in the hologram," Nolte said. "Fluctuation spectroscopy breaks down the changes into different frequencies, and we can tell how a cell's membranes, mitochondria, nucleus and even cell division respond to drugs. We measure the frequency of light fluctuations as a function of time after a drug is applied."

The resulting colorful frequency-versus-time spectrogram represents a unique voice-print of the drug used on the cells.

"Individual drugs have different spectrograms, but with similarities within specific classes," Nolte said. "By looking at how cell motion responds to drugs, we can differentiate very fine mechanistic points between them."

Drug researchers and manufacturers may benefit from the technology by being able to more quickly determine which drug candidates are most effective in battling tumors and other tissue diseases.

"This technology, with its high-throughput aspect, allows manufacturers to place a different tumor into 384 plates, test 384 different drug compounds and create 384 spectrograms in six hours," Nolte said.

The technology is patented and available for licensing through Joseph Trebley of the Purdue Research Foundation's Office of Technology Commercialization, at 765-588-3832, jptrebley@prf.org.

Purdue Research Foundation
Steve Martin, 765-588-3342
sgmartin@prf.org



 
Support Wikipedia

NeswBlaze top writers

Find more stories recommended by Stumbleupon.

newsletter logo

What's Hot?
1 .Supermodel Bar Refaeli Adorns the Cover of the 2009 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue on Newsstands Today! - 198
2 .Africa Oil Operations Update - 62
3 .Oprah Winfrey Come Out of The Closet! Admit You're a Lesbian! - 40
4 .Go Social Film Magazine Partners with the San Jose Short Film Festival to Stream Official Selections Online to a Global Audience via iPad - 39
5 .These 10 Comfortable Walking Shoes Are a Step in the Right Direction - 41
6 .Give a Great Valedictorian Speech - Joey Asher - 36
7 .Sandra Bullock's Naked Success - 33
8 .Waterless 'Air Cooler PLUS' Beats Summer's Heat Without Making Your Home Muggy - 34
9 .Photos: Valkyrie MEDEVAC - 39
10 ."K-1 Rising 2012 - K-1 World Max Final 16 2012" Announces May 27 Pay-Per-View Ustream Channel - 28
Updated: 23:30 PDT     4877

NewsBlaze Editors

editors

NewsBlaze Writers

news writer images

Writers Wanted

Help NewsBlaze provide daily news, including top stories, Home and Garden, Technology, The Environment and more. NewsBlaze Writer

Follow NewsBlaze

NewsBlaze Social Media Logos NewsBlaze Facebook NewsBlaze LinkedIn NewsBlaze Twitter NewsBlaze YouTube NewsBlaze MySpace NewsBlaze Fan Page NewsBlaze StumbleUpon NewsBlaze Political Cartoons NewsBlaze Editorial Cartoons
NewsBlaze 
Copyright © 2004-2012 NewsBlaze LLC
Use of this website is subject to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy  | DMCA Notice |         Press Room