New nanoparticles boost immune system in mice to fight melanoma and breast cancer

Source: PHYS.ORG, July 2024

Vanderbilt researchers have developed a set of nanoparticles that stimulate the immune system in mice to fight cancer and may eventually do the same in humans.

The research, led by John T. Wilson, associate professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and biomedical engineering, was recently published in ACS Nano.

Working with collaborators at Yale University, Wilson and his team designed lipid nanoparticles—the tiny balls of fat behind the success of mRNA vaccines—to deliver a nucleic acid molecule that triggers an anti-tumor immune response.

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