Nano-Probes Stay Inside a Cell's Nucleus for Days 123
Roland Piquepaille writes "Researchers from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL) have developed fluorescent and stable nano-probes which can stay inside a cell's nucleus for hours or even days. According to this LBL news release, this will help biologists to better understand nuclear processes that evolve slowly, such as DNA replication, genomic alterations, and cell cycle control. This research was partially based on previous investigations about quantum dots. Now, the researchers want to tailor their quantum dots, which emit different colors depending on their sizes, to check specific chemical reactions inside nuclei, such as how proteins help repair DNA after irradiation. Read more for other details and references and to see how a nano-sized probe is entering a cell's nucleus."
Resistance is futile (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Resistance is futile (Score:2)
Just look at proteinsl; they provide structure, enzymes, channels (for transport of molecules through cell walls) and other rolls. Yet, we still can't deal with more than the smallest ones.
The benefits of this advancement lay in the little things, like now being able to put a "camera" of sorts in cells in vito!
I'm thinking more "inner space" than "borg".
Re:Required Reading (Score:2)
It deserves at least a "+1 Interesting".
Pah! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Pah! (Score:1)
Only care . . . (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Offtopic? (Score:2, Informative)
I hope this clarifies why a mitochondrion is important.
Re:Offtopic? (Score:3, Informative)
Also, only eukaryotes have mitochondria.
Re:Offtopic? (Score:1)
More specifically I believe only aerobic eukaryotes have mitochondria as they are heavily tied to the utilization of O2 in the production of ATP. Anaerobic cells simply convert the sugar to lactic acid of alcohol without using oxygen.
Re:Offtopic? (Score:4, Insightful)
Uhhh . . . in a word, no. Sounds like the complexity and accuracy a high school biology lecture . .
Mitochodria oxidize Pyruvic acid in a series of steps to convert NAD+ to NADH. This produces CO2 and Acetyl CoA. Acetyl CoA is further oxidized in the Citric Acid Cycle producing more NADH and CO2.
What you may be thinking about is glycolysis . . . which is the breakdown of sugar (typically glucose) into pyruvic acid. This happens in the cytosol OUTSIDE the mitochodria. It is important to note that almost any carbon based molecule in the body can be converted into pyruvate and oxidized in the mitochodria (fatty acids, sugars, amino acids, some nucleic acids, etc.)
NADH is then converted into NAD+ through a mitochodria membrane to convert Adenosine Diphosphate (ADP) to Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) along an inner membrane of the mitochodria.
A more accurate restatement of your post might be:
Mitochodria oxidize pyruvate derived from sugar, fatty acids, amino acids, and other sources to produce NADH. Mitochodria also use NADH to convert ADP to ATP.
Uh... (Score:3, Funny)
Genetic pr0n? Sure tells us a lot about the minds of scientists.
This is a marketing strategy. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This is a marketing strategy. (Score:1)
Alarmist (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Alarmist (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Alarmist (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Alarmist (Score:1)
Otherwise it would include all chemistry.
Hell, even water is well over 0.1 nm side to side!
Re:Alarmist (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Alarmist (Score:1)
'Nano' Suddenly a Gigantic Label [wired.com]
I believe he is using a new word, instead of nanotechnology, to describe his vision - but I can't seem to find it anywhere.
Re:Alarmist (Score:2)
Re:Alarmist (Score:1)
If you have a technology that can repair cells, what's to say that a mistake couldn't happen that would create cancer or some other problems? That is the fear. Also, as the technology advances, it may become possible that new diseases are created while trying to come up with cures for other diseases.
On today's topic, I'm not afraid of what they are doing currently, but the direction will scare many peo
Re:Alarmist (Score:1)
One word.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Dear god, not another one. (Score:4, Interesting)
Question to the mature Slashdot community. I'm aware that Piquepaille runs a site called Technology Trends which at a brief examination seems to be a reasonably typical tech site written from an insider's PoV, so he's well qualified to submit at Slashdot.. but how does he do it so often?
This isn't just sour grapes - I had a story accepted once and I rarely submit - but this guy's so prolific it makes me wonder what he's doing right.
Re:Dear god, not another one. (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Dear god, not another one. (Score:2, Offtopic)
Kickbacks, perhaps?
Re:Dear god, not another one. (Score:3, Interesting)
I may be wrong, but I doubt it's that simple.
Re:Dear god, not another one. (Score:1)
Re:Dear god, not another one. (Score:2)
... I've got a few points to spare ... so let me help out ...
... hopefully, the newer moderators will follow the linky below and see that there's more than initially meets the eye ...
linky [thedarkcitadel.com]
Ah, well, it's only karma after all.
Idea... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Idea... (Score:1)
Knowing people, its not gonna happen anytime soon (Score:2)
"Nanoprobe" (Score:5, Funny)
3 Words For Small (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:"Nanoprobe" (Score:2)
Observe without interfering? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:1)
j/k
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:3, Informative)
they definitely show quantum mechanical behavior (Score:2)
Well, I will admit that quantum dots don't have dual wave-particle like electrons, but it is utterly wrong to say that they'
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:3, Interesting)
One of the ways that molecular biologists knock out genes that they wish to study is by a proccess called RNA inteference. They do this by inserting a peice of DNA with the complementary sequence of the targeted gene. The cell then transcribes both the gene and the opposite gene into mRNA, these two mRNA fragments hybridize forming double stranded RNA. A typical cell never has stranded RNA (virii do caus
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:1)
Lupus is partially do to the body trying to attack the DNA within cells.
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:1)
The second thing is that I am quite sure that the guys at Berkeley Lab did think about interference with the intra-nucleus reactions. And if they can keep the things in there for hours and days, it's most likely not to interfere. It also says
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:3, Informative)
As to the light produced, I doubt this will have a negative effect unless
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:1)
Im pretty sure the ping ping ball would melt or at least burst in to flames - if thats not affecting it, I don't know what is!
Ohhh, you meant affect the sun... Damn.
Re:Observe without interfering? (Score:1)
The only way that the "probe" could interfere with the nuclear processes would be by reacting with either the DNA or the proteins that are replicating the DNA. Because the probes, called QDots, are chemically inert chunks of semi-conductor, they are chemically unreactive. So no, the nucleus doesn't have any reaction to a foreign body entering it, unless the foreign body chemically reacts with whatever is already in the nucleus, and the "prob
Okaaaay... (Score:1)
Guess the only item on TODO list is the actual assimilation.
Re:Questions (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Questions (Score:1)
Re:Questions (Score:2)
if you look at single cell organisms, which "normally" live in, say pond water, you can examine them in pretty close to thier normal env. Or say, a sperm cell - that exists outside the body. And every scientist is painfully aware that many cells are not normal outside the body; there are whole books on this
Also, it is well established that you need a tag to look at, say cell surface proteins; this is done everyday. Not sure how nanoprobes help map a protei
fluorescent (Score:4, Funny)
Now we can mod our heads to match our PC cases!
Nucular (Score:1, Funny)
Nucular - it's nucular.
Yet another Ronald Piquepaille article (Score:5, Informative)
Robotic Nanotech Swarms on Mars... in 2034 [slashdot.org] 14:54 Wednesday 30 March 2005
Nano-Probes Stay Inside a Cell's Nucleus for Days [slashdot.org] 19:42 Tuesday 29 March 2005
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Smart Holograms Used as Biosensors [slashdot.org] 20:22 Sunday 20 February 2005
Wearable PC with an Artificial-Reality Helmet [slashdot.org] 20:20 Saturday 19 February 2005
Transgenic Mustard Cleans Up Soils [slashdot.org] 22:38 Tuesday 15 February 2005
Elektro, the Oldest U.S. Robot [slashdot.org] 16:35 Thursday 10 February 2005
Open-Source Streaming Translations in Porto Alegre [slashdot.org] 15:33 Monday 31 January 2005
RFID-Equipped Robots Used as Guide Dogs [slashdot.org] 19:35 Saturday 29 January 2005
Streaming a Database in Real Time [slashdot.org] 23:58 Friday 21 January 2005
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Engineered Enhancers Closer Than You Think [slashdot.org] 20:54 Friday 31 December 2004
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Robotic Science Network Watches Our Oceans [slashdot.org] 23:32 Friday 03 December 2004
I think I speak for most readers here when I yell: SLASHDOT EDITORS, PLEASE, NO MORE LINKS TO RONALDS NO-GOOD BLOG.
Re:Yet another Ronald Piquepaille article (Score:1)
Although I agree with your points, at least respect him enough to use his correct name - it's Roland, not Ronald.
Re:Yet another Ronald Piquepaille article (Score:2)
That's the sound of the joke hitting Mach 1 over your head.
Re:Yet another Ronald Piquepaille article (Score:2, Interesting)
A real hit on the club scene! (Score:3, Funny)
Imagine getting some that fluoresce under 'black light' and putting those suckers in your epidermal/dermal cells! You'd be the hit of the club scene changing colors and glowing!
Re:A real hit on the club scene! (Score:1)
tentacles would be cool and useful too...and possibly open up opportunities for a lucrative career in the anime tentacle-porn industry.
Re:A real hit on the club scene! (Score:2)
Funny you should say that - I'll pass on the tentacles, but I've wanted chromataphores since I was a kid. How cool would that be? My wife would know my mood without either of us having to say a thing. On second thought, that might not be good...
"Nano" everywhere! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:"Nano" everywhere! (Score:3, Informative)
potentially, you can tune the excitation and emission spectra to match your laser lines, so if someone develops a real cheap stable diode laser, you can tune the dot to that line
on the other hand, the qdots are big e
Re:"Nano" everywhere! (Score:3, Informative)
You obviously have never heard of BODIPY [invitrogen.com] fluorophores, although I admit the admission spectrum is not quite as narrow as you describe. Multiplexing is easier with quantum dots, but you excite all of them at the
Cancer cure in there somewhere? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cancer cure in there somewhere? (Score:5, Informative)
There's a company that's working on an enzyme dye using jellyfish flourescence to do just that. This would work in theory even after it has metastized.
then does that mean you could home in on them with a gamma knife and elimite them in any delicate part of the body with perfect accuracy?
Forget gamma knife. Proton treatment [llu.edu] is where it's at. Get radiation treatment for your prostate cancer in the morning, play tennis in the afternoon. Basically they create a 3D model of the tumor and modulate the proton beam's energy and shape (using a series of masks) so that the protons deposit most of their energy inside the tumor. There's a small amount that gets deposited ahead of it and none behind. Much cleaner/better than other radiation treatments. I've heard that with early diagnosis they're getting phenomenal success rates. And its outpatient.
Re:Cancer cure in there somewhere? (Score:2)
I think this is old stuff (Score:3, Insightful)
The reason nano probes are so small... (Score:1)
Ewww (Score:2)
Nanoprobes (Score:2, Insightful)
Biotech Press Release via Slashdot (Score:1)
Few people here know anything about molecular biology, as the "longest chemical name" [slashdot.org] article made clear, so you'll get millions of hits with virtually zero risk of someone calling you out or asking inconvenient questions.
A Primitive Example (Score:2)
of why nanotech will accelerate science in various areas.
And why people who denigrate the probability of massive changes in human biology as a result of nanotech are ignoring the synergistic effects. Nanotech will speed up scientific research in many areas, allowing much faster technology development than most specialists think is likely in their particular field of endeavor.
Drexler predicted this effect in "Engines of Creation" and it is still consistently ignored by most "pundits".
sounds like nuclear medicine (Score:1)