May 5, 2009

Magnetic Bacteria Used as Drug Carriers

Bacteria take fantastic voyage through bloodstream


Canadian engineers have sent swimming magnetic bacteria through the bloodstreams of rats. The work is a step towards the team's goal of harnessing them as drug mules steered through human bodies using magnetic fields.

Microscopic machines have proven attractive to medics trying to make treatments ever more targeted and less invasive than surgery. But although it is now possible to make micromachines from individual molecules, providing them with power is another matter.

Propulsion systems or even swimming motions that work at larger scales don't work when scaled down because of the treacly forces that dominate fluids at microscopic scales.

Sylvain Martel's team at the École Polytechnique de Montréal in Canada think tapping the skills of bacteria that have evolved to swim with ease at the microscopic scale is the best solution.

Speed demon

"Instead of trying to build a nanomachine it makes more sense to spend effort trying to control what nature provides," says Martel. He and his team are focusing on a bacterium dubbed MC-1 – a microbial speed demon that swims 10 times faster than most species and can travel at top speeds of 200 micrometres per second using its twirling flagella.

If MC-1 was to be loaded with a drug and given the ability to target a particular tissue it could provide a nimble addition to the medical arsenal.

Apart from speed, the bacterium has another property that makes it a perfect candidate for the role: each cell contains a chain of magnetic nanoparticles, allowing the bacteria to sense and swim along magnetic fields.

Remote control

By placing a patient inside an MRI machine it would be possible to create a magnetic field to steer the magnetic bacteria in any direction, towards targets just a few micrometres across, says Martel.

Martel says initial tests suggest the bacteria are not harmful – and generally not harmed – inside the body. His team injected a 50 microlitre solution containing some 50 million MC-1 bacteria into the bloodstream of rats, and found no adverse reaction.

"More work needs to be done, but it appears a sufficient quantity of these bacteria can be injected without causing toxicity," he told New Scientist. The bacteria naturally die after about 40 minutes in the blood, and would then be cleaned up by the immune system.

The initial rat trials simply assessed the health impact of injecting the bacteria – the next step is to guide them using magnetic fields, which will be precisely controlled via computer, says Martel. The team has already shown that's possible in principle by steering the magnetic bacteria in a 50-micrometre-diameter tube system.

Metal mules

In 2007, the same team piloted metal particles through the blood stream of a living pig using an MRI machines. Using magnetic bacteria is a more attractive option because the applied field needs only to direct the microbes as they propel themselves towards the target.

Bradley Nelson at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, who earlier this year designed a magnetically controlled artificial bacteriumMovie Camera, thinks the work is an improvement on a 2004 study by Howard Berg at Harvard University.]

Berg used another bacterial species to create a simple propulsion system. "By using MC-1 instead, Martel had been able to demonstrate steering in addition to propulsion," Nelson says. "I am sure there are issues in keeping the bacteria happy, but it is certainly a clever idea."

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