The California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI) at UCLA
and NanoPacific Holdings Inc. have announced a partnership to
commercialize a mechanized, nanoparticle-based technology that could
lead to prolonged lives of enhanced quality for millions of cancer
sufferers.
Under the terms of the partnership, NanoPacific will receive
exclusive license to key intellectual property owned by UCLA and
developed at the CNSI's Nano Machine Center. The newly formed company
will provide funding for further research at the center to broaden the
scope of the technology for a diverse range of applications.
"This partnership is a prime example of how the CNSI will
fulfill its mission," said UCLA Chancellor Gene Block. "Working with
industry to bring new developments in technology and biotechnology into
the marketplace for the benefit of the people of California is exactly
why the CNSI was established."
The first application under the new partnership will involve
the use of the technology for the targeted delivery of Food and Drug
Administration-approved chemotherapeutic agents to cancer cells.
Because of their unique properties, the mechanized nanoparticles can be
preprogrammed to seek out cancer cells specifically while avoiding the
body's other rapidly growing cells. In addition, the robot-like
nanoparticles allow for the triggered release of cancer drugs that are
currently difficult to administer intravenously because of their low
solubilities in the blood stream.
The delivery mechanism consists of porous nanoparticles that
are capable of storing and selectively releasing small drug molecules
via nanoscale gates that can be opened and closed at will on the
particles' surfaces. In this way, drugs can be loaded and unloaded in a
selective manner in different environments. By equipping the
nanoparticle surfaces with specific tags to preferentially target
cancer cells, diseased cells can be destroyed selectively without
affecting healthy ones, reducing drug toxicity dramatically and sparing
patients many of the highly undesirable side effects of chemotherapy,
including hair loss and chronic diarrhea.
The concept is a simple one that is open to infinite
variation, and significant applications of the new technology are
anticipated in other major commercial areas, including scents and
cosmetics, food products, environmental remediation, construction
materials, and defense.
The California NanoSystems Institute fosters interdisciplinary
collaborations in nanoscience and nanotechnology research and
facilitates partnerships with private industry, fueling economic
development and ensuring the social well-being of California, the
United States and the world.
"This collaboration underscores many key objectives of the
CNSI," said Leonard H. Rome, CNSI interim director and senior associate
dean of research at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. "The
faculty members involved in the Nano Machine Center at CNSI are
developing exciting technologies which have the potential to generate
major advances in healthcare and medical treatment."
"We are looking forward to launching this collaboration and
working in a seamless fashion with UCLA and the world-class scientific
team at the CNSI to develop and commercialize nanotechnology," said
Joseph A. Boystak, chairman and co-chief executive officer of
NanoPacific Holdings. "We intend to prioritize and aggressively pursue
multiple applications in the medical, consumer, environmental and
industrial sectors, and in doing so, we envision spawning a series of
companies and partnerships with important commercial partners to
accelerate the roll-out of this technology."
"I am delighted to be part of the team that provides a bridge
from the cutting-edge research being done at the CNSI to industry,"
said Michael B. Flesch, vice chairman and co-CEO of NanoPacific. "This
step is a profound one for NanoPacific Holdings and UCLA as we move
forward in the dynamic world of nanotechnology. This collaboration also
underscores the value and importance of academic-commercial
partnerships."
"The breadth of commercial applications for technologies
arising from university nanotechnology research is enormous, and UCLA
is excited to be working with the team of business and scientific
talent at NanoPacific to bring nanotech-enabled products to market to
benefit patients and society at large," said Earl Weinstein, assistant
director of technology transfer at UCLA. "This startup is part of a
growing number of high-tech companies resulting from research at UCLA
that have chosen to establish themselves locally, which also benefits
the burgeoning Los Angeles tech cluster.
"We look forward to a long and productive relationship with
them," he said.
Posted 18th December 2007