[Home]
[Full version]
Trio of Researchers Wins $1.1-Million Grant to Study Nanoparticles
Apr 18 ,Nanotechnology
Applications, Effects of Peptide-Wrapped Carbon Nanotubes Focus of Three-Year Project Funded by French Science Agency
An international trio of scientists, including a chemist from The University of Texas at Dallas (UTD), has won a three-year, $1.1-million grant from a French science foundation to conduct collaborative research of nanoparticles, with an emphasis on possible bio-medical applications of such particles and their potential effects on the human body.
Dr. Gregg R. Dieckmann, assistant professor of chemistry at UTD, is one of the recipients of a Young Investigators Award from the Human Frontier Science Program, an organization located in Strasbourg, France. Dieckmann will share the award money with Dr. Alan B. Dalton, a lecturer in the Department of Physics at the University of Surrey in England, and Dr. Johnny Coleman, a lecturer in the Physics Department of the University of Dublin in Ireland.
Grants provided by the program support basic research in the life sciences, with an emphasis on novel, innovative approaches that involve scientific exchanges across both national and disciplinary boundaries. Grant recipients, all of whom are promising scientists early in their careers, are expected to develop new lines of research through their collaboration.
Dieckmann and his colleagues plan to design and create proteins that will interact with carbon nanotubes, cylinders made of graphite that are many thousands of times thinner than a human hair and have remarkable electrical, thermal and structural properties. The proteins, amino acid sequences known as peptides, will be used to coat the nanotubes to allow them to be separated and more easily manipulated, as well as to explore their use in a range of molecular medical applications.
“One aspect of our research will involve targeting peptide-wrapped carbon nanotubes to specific cell types, with the intent of using the thermal properties of the nanotubes to destroy the targeted cells,” Dieckmann said. “If successful, the research could lead to new, non-invasive treatments for cancer and other diseases.”
The trio of researchers also will assess what, if any, toxicological effects the peptide-wrapped carbon nanotubes have on living cells.
Dieckmann hopes that by wrapping carbon nanotubes with peptides, the resulting combination will become more “bio-friendly,” thus expanding possible uses in the human body.
“We expect to advance the understanding of the synthetic-biological materials interface for molecular medical applications,” he said. “This work should have wide-ranging impact in the life sciences, especially where nanoparticles are used as in vivo imaging agents, chemical sensors, drug delivery devices and artificial tissues.”
Dieckmann will be assisted in his research by other faculty members associated with the university’s Bio-Nanotechnology Group, including Dr. Ray H. Baughman of the UTD NanoTech Institute and Chemistry Department, Dr. Rockford K. Draper of the Molecular and Cell Biology and Chemistry Departments, and Dr. Inga H. Musselman and Dr. Paul Pantano, both of the Chemistry Department.
Dieckmann joined the faculty of UTD in 1999. He earned a Ph.D. degree and an M.S. degree, both in chemistry, from the University of Michigan, and a B.A. degree, with a dual major in chemistry and computer science, from DePauw University. He did postdoctoral work in biochemistry and biophysics at the University of Pennsylvania.
Source: University of Texas at Dallas
Related stories:
True properties of carbon nanotubes measured
For more than 15 years, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have been the flagship material of nanotechnology. Researchers have conceived applications for nanotubes ranging from microelectronic devices to cancer therapy. Their atomic structure should, in theory, give them mechanical and electrical properties far superior to most common materials.
Slipping through cell walls, nanotubes deliver high-potency punch to cancer tumors in mice
(PhysOrg.com) -- The problem with using a shotgun to kill a housefly is that even if you get the pest, you'll likely do a lot of damage to your home in the process. Hence the value of the more surgical flyswatter.
'Nanonet' circuits closer to making flexible electronics reality
Researchers have overcome a major obstacle in producing transistors from networks of carbon nanotubes, a technology that could make it possible to print circuits on plastic sheets for applications including flexible displays and an electronic skin to cover an entire aircraft to monitor crack formation.
Carbon Nanotubes heralded as ideal candidates for next generation Nanoelectronics
(PhysOrg.com) -- Widely regarded as the wonder material of the 21st century, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and the intramolecular junctions that connect CNTs for integration have been hailed as the ideal candidates for the next generation of Nanoelectronics.
A Telescope Made of Moondust
A gigantic telescope on the Moon has been a dream of astronomers since the dawn of the space age. A lunar telescope the same size as Hubble (2.4 meters across) would be a major astronomical research tool. One as big as the largest telescope on Earth—10.4 meters across—would see far more than any Earth-based telescope because the Moon has no atmosphere. But why stop there? In the Moon's weak gravity, it might be possible to build a telescope with a mirror as large as 50 meters across, half the length of a football field—big enough to analyze the chemistry on planets around other stars for signs of life.
Carbon Nanotubes Compromise the Functions of Certain Protozoa, Study Shows
A new study by researchers from the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada, hints that carbon nanotubes may be toxic to microorganisms. When cultures of a certain key protozoan, a single-cell organism, were exposed to the nanotubes their ability to ingest and digest bacteria was hindered.
Nanoparticles aid bone growth
In the first study of its kind, bioengineers and bioscientists at Rice University and Radboud University in Nijmegen, Netherlands, have shown they can grow denser bone tissue by sprinkling stick-like nanoparticles throughout the porous material used to pattern the bone.
New detector uses nanotubes to sense deadly gases
Using carbon nanotubes, MIT chemical engineers have built the most sensitive electronic detector yet for sensing deadly gases such as the nerve agent sarin.
[Home]
[Full version]