麻豆传媒

Analyzing Cancer Migration So We Can Stop It

According to the there are 623,405 people living with metastatic breast, prostate, lung, colorectal or bladder cancer or metastatic melanoma in the United States, and that number is expected to increase to 693,452 by the year 2025. With the estimated number of cases on the rise, now is the time to stop this disease in its tracks. Professors at 麻豆传媒 are trying to do just that.  

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Dr. Hanbin Mao

Hanbin Mao, Ph.D., professor, and Yaorong Zheng, Ph.D., associate professor, both of chemistry and biochemistry, and Yuki Suzuki, Ph.D., at Mie University in Japan, are conducting research on the mechanical modulation of cell migrations using DNA nanoassemblies.

While it might seem odd to see the word 鈥渕echanical鈥 in the context of biology, Mao said this term is a universal property for almost everything, including people.

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Yaorong Zheng, Ph.D

Mechanical properties influence a material鈥檚 reaction to applied forces.

鈥淟ook at a bigger scale with humans or animals, all the actions they鈥檙e doing are mechanical. With humans, we speak and there鈥檚 muscle that is functioning there,鈥 Mao said. 鈥淎t the cellular level, there are a lot of mechanical processes. Cells will migrate and that migration is essentially what causes a cut on the skin to heal.鈥

Mao鈥檚 work focuses on cancer biology, in particular, metastatic cancer and discovering how cancer spreads and evolves inside human bodies.

鈥淚nside the body of a cancer cell or cancer-causing cell, you鈥檒l see that the cell has this migration motion involved,鈥 Mao said. 鈥淲hen the cancer first develops as a colony, it wants to spread out, which involves migration.鈥 

To help fund his research, Mao has been awarded a $341,588 National Institute of Health (NIH) Research Project Grant (R01).

The research team is trying to modulate 鈥 or control and influence 鈥 these processes/motions of the cell using DNA nanoassemblies.

鈥淭he cancer has to migrate out. We want to find out how they鈥檙e doing this using a very, very tiny DNA nanoassembly,鈥 Mao said. 鈥淎fter researching, I found that cancer cell migration is in the area where we can use a mechanical approach to modulate that.鈥

Currently, the research is targeting metastatic cancer. These cancer colonies spread out to other tissues or organs. 

鈥淚 started to think about how we might be able to apply this technology into more practical settings,鈥 Mao said. 鈥淢ore importantly, we want to also seek the opportunity and probability that we may stop this movement and spread of cancer in human bodies.鈥

This research will continue for the next five years. Mao and his team will be diligently working to learn more about cancer cells and how they travel through the human body in hopes of discovering how to halt the upward trend of those who are affected by this disease every year.

For more information about this research community, please visit Kent State鈥檚 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

POSTED: Thursday, March 16, 2023 12:56 PM
Updated: Thursday, March 16, 2023 01:21 PM
WRITTEN BY:
Jordan Bryski, Flash Communications