Description
Colon Cancer
Colorectal cancer is the third common cancer and accounts for 9.7% of all cancers. More than half of the cases occur in well-developed regions of the world due to higher elderly population, unhealthy eating habits as well as continuous increase in risk factors.[1] [1] Valori, R. et al. European guidelines for quality assurance in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis. First Edition — quality assurance in endoscopy in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis. Endoscopy 44, SE88–SE105 (2012).
In recent years, the incidence and mortality of colon cancer in China has also been on sharp increase.[2] [2] Chen W, Zheng R, Baade PD, et al.Cancer statistics in China, 2015[J].CA Cancer J Clin, 2016, 66 (2) :115-32. In some well-developed cities such as Shanghai, the incidence of colorectal cancer has rose to the second place among all the other cancers, and even in rural areas the occurence has also rises up to the fifth place. [3] [3] Gao Ying, Shi Lei. Study on colonoscopy screening results of colon cancer in middle-aged and elderly people in a hospital[J]. Chinese Journal of Endoscopy 1-7.
To see more details about colorectal cancer, click to go to our Background page.
Why Do We Aim On Early Screening Of Colorectal Cancer?
Early screening is of great significance in inhibiting the progress of colorectal cancer. The earlier the disease is diagnosed the more rapid proper treatment can be given. For the past few years, early screening of colorectal cancer has been promoted and carried out accross the country. However, due to the large imbalance in the level of medical care across mainland China ,with the existing screening methods, colonoscopy, being either expensive or painful, early screening for colon cancer remains confined.
On the other hand, synthetic biology has shown great potential as well as brand new perspectives in diagnosis and therapeutic fields for numerous severe disease.As a result we wonder if it is possible to develop a cheaper, more convenient screening method using synthetic biology. Against all odds, we proudly present our design, ECHO.
What is Echo?
ECHO, short for "E.coli for colon health observation", is how we name our device. The name highlights the most important part of our project, visualizing cancerous section with ultrasound instead of currently-used colonoscopy .
So How Does ECHO Work?
The design of ECHO involves four parts: location, imaging, and medicine synthesis and release .
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Localization
It has been proved that high level of T antigen, a kind of glycoprotein, is expressed on the surface of cancerous cells. Utilizing this characteristic, we equipped ECHO with a oligo peptide that specifically binds with T antigen. As a result, after being introduced in the digesting system, our device anchors on cancerous area and is capable of expressing further engineered functions.
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Imaging
Other than visible light used in traditional screening method, our project uses acoustic reporter genes, ARGs, for visualization under ultrasound. When ARGs is expressed, our device produces 200 nm in diameter gas vesicles that are visible in supersonic range. In other words, when ECHO is introduced into the digesting system, it produces signals that can be detected non-invasively using ultrasound.
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Medicine Synthesis and Release
Besides diagnosis use, we've also engineered ECHO to help inhibit the progress of cancer. Nitric oxide is a distinguishing factor near cancerous area where its level is a lot higher than it is in normal tissue. When our device is exposed under such high level of nitric oxide,it produces azurin, a chemical that kills cancerous cells. However not until the bacteria collapse does the substance get released to the system. And this is why we've designed a suicide pathway triggared by arabinose to enable normal functioning of azurin. When our patient consumes arabinose, ECHO starts to collapse, guaranteeing both cancer progress inhibition and biosafety.
Go to the Design page to see more details.
How does ECHO like?
Reference
[1] Valori, R. et al. European guidelines for quality assurance in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis. First Edition — quality assurance in endoscopy in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis. Endoscopy 44, SE88–SE105 (2012).
[2]Chen W, Zheng R, Baade PD, et al.Cancer statistics in China, 2015[J].CA Cancer J Clin, 2016, 66 (2) :115-32.