Spray of tiny particles of gold can potentially treat heart disease, research suggests

Spray of tiny particles of gold can potentially treat heart disease, research suggests
The therapy tested—which was sprayed on the hearts of lab mice—used very low concentrations of peptide-modified particles of gold created in the laboratory. Credit: ACS Nano (2022). DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c08890

Could a spritz of super-tiny particles of gold and peptides on a damaged heart potentially provide minimally invasive, on-the-spot repair?

Cutting-edge research led by University of Ottawa Faculty of Medicine Associate Professors Dr. Emilio Alarcon and Dr. Erik Suuronen suggests a spray-on technology using customized nanoparticles of one of the world's most offers tremendous therapeutic potential and could eventually help save many lives. Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death globally, claiming roughly 18 million lives each year.

In a paper recently published online in ACS Nano, a peer-reviewed journal that highlighted the new research on its supplementary cover, Dr. Alarcon and his team of fellow investigators suggest that this approach might one day be used in conjunction with coronary artery bypass surgeries. That's the most common type of heart surgery.

The therapy tested by the researchers—which was sprayed on the hearts of lab mice—used very low concentrations of peptide-modified particles of created in the laboratory. From the nozzle of a miniaturized spraying apparatus, the material can be evenly painted on the surface of a heart within a few seconds.

Gold nanoparticles have been shown to have some unusual properties and are highly chemically reactive. For years, researchers have been employing gold —so tiny they are undetectable by the human eye—in such a wide range of technologies that it's become an area of intense research interest.

In this case, the custom-made nanogold modified with —a short chain of amino acids—was sprayed on the hearts of lab mice. The research found that the spray-on therapy not only resulted in an increase in cardiac function and heart but that there was no off-target organ infiltration by the tiny gold particles.

"That's the beauty of this approach. You spray, then you wait a couple of weeks, and the animals are doing just fine compared to the controls," says Dr. Alarcon, who is part of the Faculty of Medicine's Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology and also Director of the Bio-nanomaterials Chemistry and Engineering Laboratory at the University of the Ottawa Heart Institute.

Dr. Alarcon says that not only does the data suggest that the therapeutic action of the spray-on nanotherapeutic is highly effective, but its application is far simpler than other regenerative approaches for treating an infarcted heart.

At first, the observed improvement of and electrical signal propagation in the hearts of tested mice was hard for the team to believe. But repeated experiments delivered the same positive results, according to Dr. Alarcon, who is part of the Faculty of Medicine's Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology and Director of the Bio-nanomaterials Chemistry and Engineering Laboratory at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute.

To validate the exciting findings in mice, the team is now seeking to adapt this technology to minimally invasive procedures that will expedite testing in large animal models, such as rabbits and pigs.

Dr. Alarcon praised the research culture at uOttawa and the Heart Institute, saying that the freedom to explore is paramount. "When you have an environment where you are allowed to make mistakes and criticize, that really drives discoveries," he says.

The team involved in the paper includes researchers from uOttawa and the University of Talca in Chile.

More information: Marcelo Muñoz et al, Nanoengineered Sprayable Therapy for Treating Myocardial Infarction, ACS Nano (2022). DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c08890

Journal information: ACS Nano

Citation: Spray of tiny particles of gold can potentially treat heart disease, research suggests (2022, March 15) retrieved 7 May 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2022-03-tiny-particles-gold-potentially-heart.html
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