Entries from June 2008 ↓

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From the Labs: Nanotechnology

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Trade Unions Call For REACH Amendment To Cover Nanomaterials

The European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) is calling on the European Commission to change the REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Authorization, and Restriction of Chemicals) regulation to provide workers with more protections against nanomaterials throughout their full lifecycle.

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Diabetes Sufferers May Soon Draw Breath To Take New Treatment

Researchers from Monash University and Nanotechnology Victoria, both in Australia, are developing a new diabetes treatment method that could enable patients to inhale insulin nanoparticles using a handheld device.

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Nanotechnology approach to drug delivery uses multifunctional nanoparticles to silence gene

A major nanotech advance in engineering multifunctional nanoparticles for imaging and therapeutic applications combines a short RNA (siRNA) to “silence” a specific gene with quantum dots and a “proton sponge” polymer coating to get the siRNA into the cell and released into the right compartment of the cell, rendering it both much more efficient and much less toxic to the cell. From the University of Washington, via AAAS EurekAlert “Gene silencer and quantum dots reduce protein production to a whisper“:

More than 15 years ago scientists discovered a way to stop a particular gene in its tracks. The Nobel Prize-winning finding holds tantalizing promise for medical science, but so far it has been difficult to apply the technique, known as RNA interference, in living cells.

Now scientists at the University of Washington in Seattle and Emory University in Atlanta have succeeded in using nanotechnology known as quantum dots to address this problem. Their technique is 10 to 20 times more effective than existing methods for injecting the gene-silencing tools, known as siRNA, into cells.

“We believe this is going to make a very important impact to the field of siRNA delivery,” said Xiaohu Gao, a UW assistant professor of bioengineering and co-author of a study published online this week in the Journal of the American Chemical Society [abstract].

“This work helps to overcome the longstanding barrier in the siRNA field: How to achieve high silencing efficiency with low toxicity,” said co-author Shuming Nie, a professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, jointly affiliated with the Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University.

…This paper describes one of the first applications of quantum dots to drug delivery.

Each quantum dot was surrounded by a proton sponge that carried a positive charge. Without any quantum dots attached, the siRNA’s negative charge would prevent it from penetrating a cell’s wall. With the quantum-dot chaperone, the more weakly charged siRNA complex crosses the cellular wall, escapes from the endosome (a fatty bubble that surrounds incoming material) and accumulates in the cellular fluid, where it can do its work disrupting protein manufacture.

Key to the newly published approach is that researchers can adjust the chemical makeup of the quantum dot’s proton-sponge coating, allowing the scientists to precisely control how tightly the dots attach to the siRNA.

—Jim

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Nanoselenium Cloth Capturing Mercury Vapor from Broken CFLs

Researchers from Brown University in the U.S. have developed a mercury absorbing material made with nanoselenium that can potentially be used to clean up mercury vapor emitted from broken compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs).

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New Nano Technique Significantly Boosts Boiling Efficiency

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Hybrid nanowires show promise as nanotechnology building blocks

A very brief but intriguing article on ScienceDaily reports that millimeter-scale nanotech structures self-assembled from hybrid nanowires can sense and respond to external stimuli, like magnetic fields and light. From “Building Giant ‘Nanoassemblies’ That Sense Their Environment“:

Researchers in Texas are reporting the design, construction, and assembly of nano-size building blocks into the first giant structures that can sense and respond to changes in environmental conditions.

The study, scheduled for the July 9 issue of ACS’s Nano Letters [abstract]… terms those structures “giant” because they are about the size of a grain of rice — millions of times larger than anything in the submicroscopic realm of the nanoworld.

In the new study, Pulickel M. Ajayan and colleagues point out that such structures are a step toward the development of futuristic nanomachines with practical applications in delivering medicines to patients, labs-on-a-chip, and other products. Until now, scientists have had difficulty in using nanomaterials to build more complex, multifunctional objects needed for those applications.

—Jim

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Aspen Aerogels raises $37M for nano-insulation materials

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New nano technique significantly boosts boiling efficiency

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Venture Profile: NanoVector

NanoVector is an early stage therapeutic drug company commercializing a nanoparticle targeted drug delivery system developed at North Carolina State University (NCSU).