UNSW researcher makes nanomedicine breakthrough


By Amy Coopes
Wednesday, 09 December, 2015

UNSW researcher makes nanomedicine breakthrough

A UNSW researcher has used near-infrared light to create polymers — a discovery with significant implications for nanomedicine.

Polymers make up the human body's DNA and proteins, while synthetic polymers are used to manufacture everything from paints and plastics to textiles and glue.

UNSW Associate Professor Boyer, who is deputy director of the Australian Centre for Nanomedicine, is looking for more sustainable ways to produce these essential molecules, particularly for use in medical applications. For the first time, he has been able to use a low-energy form of light known as near-infrared to drive the polymerisation process, a breakthrough Professor Boyer said would open new horizons for materials science and medicine.

All objects with a temperature emit infrared radiation, and Associate Professor Boyer's work focuses on a part of the spectrum called near-infrared — a kind of energy harvested by bacteria living in deep-sea vents where light is scarce.

These bacteria use a specialised kind of chlorophyll to harness the near-infrared light, which is emitted from superheated waters erupting from the vents.

Associate Professor Boyer and PhD candidate Siva Shanmugam were able to mimic this process in the laboratory and use the energy produced to build polymers, with an exquisite degree of control over initiating and stopping the process and the length of the chains produced.

Unlike visible light, near-infrared can penetrate objects including human tissue while using a fraction of the energy, making it much safer than ultraviolet (UV) light for biological use.

UV light damages DNA and can cause cancer and mutations, making it toxic for humans, but Associate Professor Boyer said the safety profile of near-infrared light meant it could be used within the body to regenerate tissue or control bleeding during surgery.

Such polymerisation could also be done within the body, he said, paving the way for new joint replacement cements that could be triggered to set with near-infrared light rather than setting within moments of being applied.

The next phase of his research will focus on in vitro studies using live material, with the aim of encapsulating living cells in polymeric gels.

“Using a system like near-infrared will allow you to be more friendly for the materials and also biofriendly for humans," he said.

Associate Professor Boyer, a French national who grew up on a vineyard near Avignon, is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow and member of the Centre for Advanced Macromolecular Design at UNSW.

Image credit: Associate Professor Cyrille Boyer. Photo: Quentin Jones

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