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03 Nov 07

Monthly Feature - December 2005 - Nanotechnology Tackles Brain Cancer

  • Tumors may be embedded in regions of the brain that are critical to orchestrating the body’s vital functions
  • forming more tumors too small to detect using conventional imaging techniques. Brain cancer’s location and ability to spread quickly makes treatment with surgery or radiation like fighting an enemy hiding out among minefields and caves, and explains why the term “brain cancer” is all too often associated with the word “inoperable.”
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Revolutionary nanotechnology illuminates brain cells at work

  • Until now it has been impossible to accurately measure the levels of important chemicals in living brain cells in real time and at the level of a single cell. Scientists at the Carnegie Institution's Department of Plant Biology and Stanford University are the first to overcome this obstacle by successfully applying genetic nanotechnology using molecular sensors to view changes in brain chemical levels. The sensors alter their 3-dimensional form upon binding with the chemical, which is then visible via a process known as fluorescence resonance energy transfer, or FRET. In a new study, the nanosensors were introduced into nerve cells to measure the release of the neurotransmitter glutamate -- the major brain chemical that increases nerve-cell activity in mammalian brains.
  • "The fluorescent imaging technique allows us to see living cells do their jobs live and in color,"
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ISA | Military nanotechnology research may lead to civilian use

  • Nanotechnology is not only getting big in industry, but the military is investing time and money into the field. That is why the Army just initiated the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies (ISN)—a $50 million and 150-person initiative that will serve as the Army's center of expertise in the application of nanotechnology.
  • The nanotechnology-based uniforms in development for soldiers may also protect law enforcement officers, firefighters, and other emergency responders in the future, too.
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Nanotechnology.com - Nanotechnology investing, nanotech news and stock forums, and nano blogs

  • A team of researchers with the US Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [profile] and the University of California at Berkeley [profile] have created the first fully-functional radio from a single carbon nanotube, which makes it by several orders of magnitude the smallest radio ever made.

Nanotechnology.com - Nanotechnology investing, nanotech news and stock forums, and nano blogs

  • Nanotechnology holds great promise for the future of cancer therapy and water treatment, but concerns about the safety of nanoproducts may limit these important technological developments,
30 Oct 07

Nanotechnology targets new food packaging products

  • In the food-packaging arena, nanomaterials are being developed with enhanced mechanical and thermal properties to ensure better protection of foods from exterior mechanical, thermal, chemical ormicrobiological effects.
  • The most prominent products in the food industry's research and development pipeline include new polymer nanocomposites for packaging and wrapping. Foils or membranes based on nanocompositesoffer adjustable gas permeability in food packaging which can help to better protect food.

Nanotechnology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  • Nanotechnology refers broadly to a field of applied science and technology whose unifying theme is the control of matter on the atomic and molecular scale, normally 1 to 100 nanometres, and the fabrication of devices within that size range.
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