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Initiative-I Highlight

Stem cells with drug-loaded nanoparticles attached promote rapid recovery following bone marrow transplants

Image: Schematic view of biodegradable lipid particles chemically linked to the surface of stem cells. Drugs released from the particle are captured by the stem cell and provide survival and reconstitution signals

Author: D. Irvine (MIT)

Initiative-I researchers of the MIT MRSEC have developed a new process for attaching drug-loaded nanoparticles onto the surfaces of living stem cells. These biodegradable particles, 100-200 nm in diameter, slowly release drug compounds that stimulate stem cells and promote their survival and proliferation. When stem cells decorated with these particles are used to mimic a bone marrow transplant (BMT) in a murine model, the particle-carrying cells reconstitute the immune system of treated animals ~5-fold faster than traditional BMTs. Although still in the early stages of development, this work opens up the exciting possibility of dramatically shortening the time that a patient receiving a BMT is immunosuppressed following the procedure.

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