Artificial Blood Vessels Grow On Nano-Template 49
Invisible Pink Unicorn writes "Researchers at MIT have found a way to induce cells to form parallel tube-like structures that could one day lead to tiny engineered blood vessels. The researchers found that they can control the cells' development by growing them on a surface with nano-scale patterning. The work focuses on vascular tissue, which includes capillaries, the tiniest blood vessels. The team has created a surface that can serve as a template to grow capillary tubes aligned in a specific direction. The cells, known as endothelial progenitor cells, not only elongate in the direction of the grooves, but also align themselves along the grooves. That results in a multicellular structure with defined edges — a band structure. Once the band structures form, the researchers apply a commonly used gel that induces cells to form three-dimensional tubes."
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Tube-like structures (Score:5, Funny)
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I want a side of nanobots with this, please. (Score:3, Interesting)
The better question is: why? (Score:3, Interesting)
So for example, you're not hard-coded to have X millimeter thick muscles, or a certain bone density, or exactly this pattern of capillaries. You're built to react to how much do you need. So if you regularly pull/push
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and if you sit at a computer like most of us here, you get to have just enough muscle to be able to walk
1: Most of us can't walk. We can barely move our fingers enough to get the mouse across the screen on maximum sensitivity. We are tube-fed, sit on toilets, and a few people choose to breath on their own. The gamers among us might be better able to move their entire right arm from the mouse to the keyboard and back if they can't use just one hand to play.
2: The elite among us have perfected EEG-based input, so moving the mouse is no longer even necessary. We can just lie there. (Try playing Halo that way!
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So for example, you're not hard-coded to have X millimeter thick muscles, or a certain bone density, or exactly this pattern of capillaries. You're built to react to how much do you need.
While that may be correct in the sense that there are usually numerous feedbacks that regulate the nature of biological systems, there are several situations when average parameters such as the size of organs or density of tissues are merely a result of stochastic processes settling on some kind of local thermodynamic minima in terms of development.
For example, over-expression of human proteins in plants is possible [bbc.co.uk]. Hardly anyone will argue that the plants need it. They produce it only because the a
Ok, smacked (Score:1)
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Better known as a meat bot, the T9000 will do your housework, take the kids to school and give you a foot massage after a long days work without any of that nagging and yelling.
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Just a thought....
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I can't wait for the Micheal Crichton thriller (Score:5, Funny)
. . . well, I'd write more, but there's a screenwriters strike on, and I don't want to come across as a scab.
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Consumers. Crichton novels always start with the premise of super amazing technology (virtual reality, resurrect dinosaurs, time travel) and use it into selling something mundane (CD-ROM readers, dinosaur theme parks, time travel theme parks). In this case it would probably allow peop
How many more times? (Score:5, Funny)
Your sig quotes Geothe... (Score:1)
This seems like a natural step... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:This seems like a natural step... (Score:4, Insightful)
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If you create new life, that's generally not a problem (but do double-check with the creationists)!
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Why ? Most people already don't use the one they have.
Gel... (Score:2, Funny)
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=D
Blade Runner (Score:2)
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One day we'll be able to grow a complete body artificially, including the brain, and only by careful testing will you be able to tell the artificial from the natural born.
Only one way to know -- the artificial ones will have DRM to prevent unauthorized copying.
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Great! (Score:1)
Three Dimensional Tube? (Score:2, Insightful)
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a bunch of considerations (Score:2, Informative)
This is interesting stuff, basically using PDMS patterning to induce channels through which progenitor cells can be used to induce endothelial cell formation, and then they talk about using Matrigel (a collagen-based gel) with these blood vessels that form, but there are a bunch of "this can't be really used for anything" problems:
1) They used VEGF, which induces blood vessels everywhere you put it. So this is not really novel
Better URL (Score:2, Informative)
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2007/vascular-1217.html [mit.edu]
Greg