Cancer nanotech nurtures sustainable agriculture innovation

Publicly released:
Australia; New Zealand; NSW

UNSW scientist Dr. Cong Vu is applying his expertise in nanomedicine to a project focused on making greener agrichemicals more affordable. In a recent article, Dr. Cong outlined how nanotechnology principles developed to deliver toxic drugs to cancer cells could help produce more environmentally-friendly pesticides and fungicides. Last week, his start-up, NanoSoils Bio, filed its first two patents for processes designed to optimise nanoparticle efficiency.

Media release

From: The University of New South Wales

Cancer drugs and agrichemicals can be powerful, but toxic, tools. Now, UNSW scientists are applying nanomedicine insights on a project to make greener agrichemicals more affordable.

Dr. Cong Vu, Adjunct Fellow at UNSW’s School of Chemistry, outlined his research in a recent article exploring how the principles of nanoparticle design—originally developed to fight cancer—can be applied to agriculture.

In the article, Dr. Vu explains how design principles from nanomedicine, such as altering the size, surface, and material of nanoparticles that encapsulate cancer drugs, could be used to target and deliver agrichemicals to plants more effectively.

Dr. Vu, who is also the founder of the UNSW agrichemicals startup, NanoSoils Bio, says the ultimate goal is to create nanotechnology products that improve pesticide and fungicide delivery, promoting cleaner and more sustainable agriculture.

Last week, NanoSoils Bio filed for its first two patents on processes designed to optimise nanoparticle efficiency.

In addition to developing improved pesticides, NanoSoils is also working on creating silica nanoparticles that will help cotton crops become more resilient to drought.

Article coauthor and Nanosoils scientific advisor, UNSW Scientia Professor Justin Gooding, emphasises the significance of this crossover between nanomedicine and agriculture.

Prof. Gooding notes that nanomedicine has more patents and over twice as many publications as nano-agriculture. Insights from nanomedicine, therefore, hold the potential to lower one of the biggest barriers to nano-agrochemical innovation—cost.

“Rather than starting from scratch, Dr. Vu is leveraging existing knowledge to address pressing issues in agriculture and the environment,” he says.

Journal/
conference:
Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: The University of New South Wales, University of Auckland
Funder: V.T.C. acknowledges the Science and Innovation Awards sponsored by the Cotton Research and Development Corporation (CRDC), Australia. J.J.G. acknowledges the National Health and Medical Research Council for an Investigator Grant (GNT1196648). M.K. acknowledges support from the NZ Wine Growers. The report authors acknowledge Jacinta Houng (School of Chemistry, UNSW) for proofreading the manuscript.
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.