Metallic nanodots use reactive oxygen selectively kill cancer cells
Lisa Lock
scientific editor
Robert Egan
associate editor
An international research team led by RMIT University has created tiny particles, known as nanodots, made from a metallic compound that can kill cancer cells while leaving healthy cells largely unharmed. While this work is still at the cell-culture stage鈥攊t hasn't been tested in animals or people鈥攊t points to a new strategy for designing cancer treatments that exploit cancer's own weaknesses.
The particles are made from molybdenum oxide, a compound based on a rare metal called molybdenum, which is often used in electronics and alloys.
The study's lead researcher, Professor Jian Zhen Ou, and Dr. Baoyue Zhang, from the School of Engineering, said tweaking the chemical makeup made the particles release reactive oxygen molecules鈥攗nstable forms of oxygen that can damage cell components and trigger cell death.
In tests, the particles killed three times more cervical cancer cells than healthy cells over 24 hours. Importantly, they worked without needing light, which is unusual for this kind of technology.
"Cancer cells already live under higher stress than healthy ones," Zhang said. "Our particles push that stress a little further鈥攅nough to trigger self-destruction in cancer cells, while healthy cells cope just fine.
"The result was particles that generate oxidative stress selectively in cancer cells under lab conditions," she said.
The collaboration involved Dr. Shwathy Ramesan at The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health in Melbourne and researchers from institutions in China including Southeast University, Hong Kong Baptist University and Xidian University. The findings are in the journal Advanced Science.
How the innovation works
The team adjusted the recipe of the metal oxide, adding tiny amounts of hydrogen and ammonium. This fine-tuning changed how the particles handled electrons, helping them produce more of the reactive oxygen molecules that drive cancer cells into apoptosis鈥攖he body's natural clean-up process for damaged cells.
In another test, the same particles broke down a blue dye by 90% in just 20 minutes, showing how powerful their reactions can be even in darkness.
Most current cancer treatments affect both cancerous and healthy tissue. Technologies that more selectively stress cancer cells could lead to gentler, more targeted therapies. Because these particles are based on a common metal oxide rather than expensive or toxic noble metals like gold or silver, they could also be cheaper and safer to develop.
The COMBS team at RMIT is continuing this work, with next steps including targeting delivery systems so the particles activate only inside tumors, controlling release of reactive oxygen species to avoid damage to healthy tissue, and seeking partnerships with biotech or pharmaceutical companies to test the particles in animal models and develop scalable manufacturing methods.
More information: Bao Yue Zhang et al, Ultrathin Multi鈥怐oped Molybdenum Oxide Nanodots as a Tunable Selective Biocatalyst, Advanced Science (2025).
Journal information: Advanced Science
Provided by RMIT University