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ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: March 16, 2011
Laser beam makes cells ''breathe in'' water and potentially anti-cancer drug
Shining a laser light on cells and then clicking off the light-makes the cells 鈥渂reathe in鈥� surrounding water, providing a potentially powerful delivery system for chemotherapy drugs, as well as a non-invasive way to target anti-Alzheimer鈥檚 medicines to the brain. That鈥檚 the conclusion of a report in ACS鈥檚 The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters.
Andrei Sommer鈥檚 group used this technique before to force cancer cells to sip up anti-cancer drugs and fluorescent dyes. Pulses of laser light can also change the volume of water inside cells in a way that plumps up wrinkles and makes skin look younger, the researchers found in an earlier study. 鈥淭he potential applications of the technique range from anticancer strategies to the design principles of nano-steam engines,鈥� the report states. Using the so-called Liquidrom ambient approach, developed by Aziz鈥檚 group, the researchers combined for the first time laser irradiation with soft X-rays obtained from a cyclotron radiation source to explore the molecular structure of interfacial water layers under ambient conditions.
The researchers now showed that laser light aimed at a cell causes the water inside the cell to expand. When the light goes off, the volume of water collapses again, creating a strong pull that also sucks in the water surrounding the cell. This 鈥渂reathing in and out鈥� of the water molecules can pull chemotherapy drugs into a cell faster than they would normally penetrate, the researchers found. 鈥淚n other words, we discovered a powerful method to kill cancer cells by pumping anti-cancer drugs into them via laser light,鈥� said Sommer.

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