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Imaging Advance May Bring Earlier Disease Detection

The new approach is more sensitive than existing tools and could help researchers detect illnesses at a much earlier stage

by University of Edinburgh
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Imaging ProbesUniversity of Edinburgh researchers have developed new imaging probes to light up specific parts of a cell in a matter of seconds. These pictures show the probes in action in fungal cells but they could also be used on human cells to detect the early warning signs of diseases such as cancer.Image Courtesy of: Can Zhao, University of Edinburgh

Scientists have devised a technique for visualising tissues that could aid diagnosis and treatment of diseases including cancer.

The new approach is more sensitive than existing tools and could help researchers detect illnesses at a much earlier stage.

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Doctors may also be able to check how well a patient is responding to a treatment by monitoring changes occurring in cells.

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A team led by the University of Edinburgh's MRC Centre for Inflammation Research has developed probes that light up specific targets inside a cell.

Scientists tested the probes using fungal cells, but the same technique could easily be used to look at cells from patient samples.

The probes are made up of a short molecule called a peptide - which recognises the target that researchers are trying to detect—attached to a new type of fluorescent tag. Researchers can track this tag using microscopes to see where the target is being produced by the cell.

Because the new probes are more sensitive than existing probes, researchers will be able to quantify exactly how much of the target is being produced by each cell.

This will enable them to detect tiny changes in the molecular make-up of tissues that could be the early warning sign of a disease. Tracking these changes over time could also offer clues about how well a patient is responding to treatment.

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The researchers say that one day their approach could help to improve patient scans so that diseases could be picked up faster using clinical imaging, such as PET scans.

The study in the journal Nature Communications was funded by the Medical Research Council.

Dr Marc Vendrell, a Lecturer in Biomedical Imaging at the MRC Centre for Inflammation Research, said: "Peptides are a powerful tool for spotting small signs of disease but until now we did not have a good way of tracking them. With this new technology, we can make probes to detect diseases with more accuracy and at earlier stages."