Irfan School Sawfar Forum

Dear Guest , Welcome to Irfan School Sawfar's Forum . If this is
the 1st visit we would like to join us and register However dear
member , logIn and share us your valuable topics.
Irfan School Sawfar Forum

Log in

I forgot my password

Latest topics

» Test Picture
Wed Apr 21, 2010 10:16 am by Samer Al Sayegh

» Mail Has Arrived at MICDS!
Thu Feb 25, 2010 10:34 pm by Hind

» What is the hardest thing about being a student?
Fri Dec 04, 2009 7:03 pm by Ghiwa Al Banna

» Natural Disasters & Severe Weather Project
Thu Nov 19, 2009 4:49 am by mfitzgerald

» MICDS 5G1
Thu Nov 12, 2009 4:41 pm by rweight

» St. Louis, USA
Thu Nov 12, 2009 3:26 pm by mfitzgerald

» Windows 7
Tue Nov 03, 2009 2:00 pm by Samer Al Sayegh

» Beirut Marathon 2008
Mon Nov 02, 2009 5:59 pm by rabih sarieddeen

» The Midsegment Theorem
Tue Oct 06, 2009 5:25 pm by rabih sarieddeen

Download Our Toolbar

toolbar powered by Conduit

Rss feeds

Yahoo! 
Google Reader 
MSN 
AOL 
NewsGator 
Rojo 
Bloglines 

Gallery


Poll

Whats is your preferred ANTIVIRUS program?
15% 15% [ 3 ]
15% 15% [ 3 ]
15% 15% [ 3 ]
5% 5% [ 1 ]
10% 10% [ 2 ]
0% 0% [ 0 ]
21% 21% [ 4 ]
0% 0% [ 0 ]
0% 0% [ 0 ]
15% 15% [ 3 ]

Total Votes : 19

    Nano-nose to help identify illnesses

    Share

    Samer Al Sayegh
    Webmaster

    Male Number of posts: 44
    Location: Lebanon
    points:
    100 / 100100 / 100

    Forum\'s Respect:
    100 / 100100 / 100

    profile pic:
    Month of birth: december
    Day of birth: 13
    Points: 2048
    Reputation: 0
    Registration date: 2008-05-28

    Nano-nose to help identify illnesses

    Post by Samer Al Sayegh on Thu Feb 05, 2009 8:26 am

    Nano-nose to help identify illnesses


    Nanoparticles are used by U.S. researchers to 'smell' the scent of illnesses in fluids of the body. The researchers used nanoparticles of gold with different coatings to distinguish among different proteins and detect the illness, as reported by the New Scientist.
    According to Vince Rotello from the University of Massachusetts the human nose has a series of receptors, which react differently to different compounds. Thus it is not a specific smell that the receptors react to, but it is a generalized response produced by the receptors, which creates the smell.
    Teamed up with his colleagues from the university and with scientists from the Georgia Institute of Technology, Vince Rotello applied the same 'nose-principle' to detect proteins.
    The 'nano nose' uses a system of six receptors, each one consisting of a solution with gold nano particles not larger than 2 nanometers, each one having a different coating too. Nitrogen atoms form the organic molecules which make up the coating of the nanoparticles.
    Different types of proteins have different features, thus having a property to attach to various receptors, though binding with some receptors more than with others. The team's task was to identify those properties of binding for different proteins. For this purpose the team used a molecule beaming a fluorescent signal. The molecule attached to the receptor particles and then it was replaced by protein molecule when the latter bound to the receptor. This way, the more the fluorescent molecule was displaced, the more light produced. The results were subsequently analyzed by the computer.
    During the experiments the scientists ran tests with 56 different proteins and proved that the signals produced by the receptors could be then used to distinguish among various proteins. The 'nano-nose' was accurate in 96 of 100 cases during these tests.
    Mr. Rotello is optimistic about this accomplishment, as it could be used not just for smelling out proteins specific for a disease, but it could see the difference or the anomaly in the normal combination of proteins in the human body.
    After running a series of tests with blood of sick and healthy animals, the scientists were able to identify changes in serum. They do not want to stop here and they try to make this ability statistically stable. Later on Rotello plans to make the 'nano-nose' identify different kinds of cancer cells and other diseases.
    Such a nose device, sniffing out illnesses is not a novelty in the world of science and technology, as there were devices developed capable of detecting small molecules; yet the Rotello's system is the first one to detect large and complicated molecules.
    "Taken"

    lmesbahuddin
    MEMBER

    Male Number of posts: 97
    Age: 13
    Location: Missouri, USA
    points:
    0 / 1000 / 100

    Forum\'s Respect:
    0 / 1000 / 100

    profile pic:
    Points: 582
    Reputation: 0
    Registration date: 2009-02-06

    Re: Nano-nose to help identify illnesses

    Post by lmesbahuddin on Fri Mar 06, 2009 5:01 am

    so you "smell" the illness

      Current date/time is Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:19 pm