I Read It On The Internet

Light-Activated Chemicals Improve Breast Cancer Treatment

Scientists have developed new light-sensitive chemicals that can radically improve the treatment of aggressive cancers with minimal side effects.

This article was written by Jules Bernstein – UC Riverside and originally published by Futurity.

In mouse tests, the new therapy completely eradicated metastatic breast cancer tumors.

The novel chemicals, called cyanine-carborane salts, and their role in the next-generation of cancer treatments, are described in a new article published in Angewandte Chemie.

Photodynamic therapy, or PDT, has been used for decades to treat forms of skin and bladder cancers. It works by flooding a patient’s body with light-sensitive chemicals that accumulate in cancer cells. Shining a light on the patient activates the chemicals and kills the diseased cells.

The light causes the chemicals to generate highly reactive oxygen molecules—like tiny biochemical firecrackers—that break down cancer cells from the inside while leaving healthy cells unharmed.

It is a useful therapy with several drawbacks that limit its effectiveness, including prolonged light sensitivity, poor tissue penetration, and off-target toxicity. These drawbacks can prevent complete tumor eradication and may lead to a recurrence of the cancer.

“Cyanine-carborane salts minimize these challenges, offering a safer, more precise way to destroy tumors completely while sparing healthy tissue,” says Professor Sophia Lunt, Michigan State University cancer researcher and co-principal investigator of the project.

The researchers say current FDA-approved PDT chemicals remain in the body for extended periods of time. After treatment, patients have to stay in the dark for two to three months because even low levels of light will cause them to become blistered and burned.

In contrast, the researchers found that cyanine-carborane salts flush out of the body more quickly, remaining only in the cancer cells requiring treatment.

Vincent Lavallo, University of California, Riverside chemistry professor and co-prinicipal investigator, is an expert on the synthesis of carboranes.

“The most interesting thing is the targeting ability of this substance we made to go right where it’s needed and stay there while the rest passes through. That way you’ll only kill the cells right where the cancer is but not harm the patient,” Lavallo says.

Lavallo worked together with Richard Lunt, MSU endowed professor of chemical engineering, to develop the cyanine-carborane salts.

Unlike conventional PDT agents, the salts exploit a natural vulnerability in cancer cells. They’re taken up by proteins called OATPs that are overexpressed in tumors. This allows for precise targeting without the need for costly additional chemicals currently used with PDT to help target the cancer cells.

Traditional PDT is also limited in its ability to treat deep-seated tumors because it works with wavelengths of light that only penetrate a few millimeters into the body. Once inside cancer cells, cyanine-carborane salts can be activated by near-infrared light that is able to move deeper into tissues. This could expand the range of cancers that could be treated.

Given their success, the researchers are encouraged to continue the research and try to expand the types of cancer therapies the salts can be used with. It may be possible to alter the salts so that they can be used with energy sources other than light that penetrate even more deeply into the body.

“Our work offers a targeted, safe, and cost-effective treatment for aggressive breast cancers with limited treatment options,” says Amir Roshanzadeh, paper first author and MSU cell and molecular biology graduate student.

“It also opens the door to breakthroughs in other approaches for cancer therapy and targeted drug delivery.”

Source: UC Riverside

Share
U Cast Studios

Recent Posts

  • Lifestyle

How Out-Of-Work Fisherman Saved The American Revolution

George Washington knew his forces could not win the American Revolutionary War without some measure… Read More

1 day ago
  • Lifestyle

The Cost Of The Grain That Feeds Half The World Just Posted Biggest Monthly Surge Since 2008

Asian rice prices logged their biggest monthly gain in nearly two decades in May, as… Read More

1 day ago
  • I Read It On The Internet

AI Can Chart A Course To Disaster Faster Than Humans Can Notice

Earlier this year, researchers at King’s College London gave three commercial AI models—GPT-5.2, Claude Sonnet 4,… Read More

2 days ago
  • Lifestyle

How Sleep And Dementia May Be Linked

A new article digs into how sleep, the brain’s process for clearing waste, and dementia… Read More

5 days ago
  • Business

Data Centers Now Consume 6% Of US Electricity—And The Backlash Has Begun

Strong opposition kicks in when data center demand surpasses 5% of a country's power supply.… Read More

6 days ago
  • Business

Oklo COO Says Nuclear Waste Could Power America For 150 Years

Earlier this week, we covered Oklo’s approval by Chris Wright’s DOE to convert plutonium previously set for… Read More

6 days ago

This website uses cookies.