Nanosingularity

Engines of Creation 2.0: Molecular Engineering: An Approach to the Development of General Capabilities for Molecular Manipulation

July 7, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Developing the ability to design protein molecules will make it possible to construct molecular machines. These can then build second-generation machines that can perform extremely general synthesis of three-dimensional molecular structures, thus permitting construction of devices and materials to complex atomic specifications. This has important implications for computation and for characterization, manipulation, and repair of biological materials.

In this assay nanotech pioneer Eric Dexler provides his upgraded vision of future nanotechnology advances.  

Read rest of the article here

 

Categories: Nanodevices · Nanomachines · nanotech · nanotechnology

Scientists demonstrate first use of nanotechnology to enter plant cells

July 7, 2007 · 1 Comment

A team of Iowa State University plant scientists and materials chemists have successfully used nanotechnology to penetrate plant cell walls and simultaneously deliver a gene and a chemical that triggers its expression with controlled precision. Their breakthrough brings nanotechnology to plant biology and agricultural biotechnology, creating a powerful new tool for targeted delivery into plant cells.

(more…)

Categories: Biology · nanotech · nanotechnology

Nanotube adhesive sticks better than a gecko’s foot

July 7, 2007 · 1 Comment

Mimicking the agile gecko, with its uncanny ability to run up walls and across ceilings, has long been a goal of materials scientists. Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the University of Akron have taken one sticky step in the right direction, creating synthetic “gecko tape” with four times the sticking power of the real thing.

In a paper published in the June 18–22 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers describe a process for making polymer surfaces covered with carbon nanotube hairs. The nanotubes imitate the thousands of microscopic hairs on a gecko’s footpad, which form weak bonds with whatever surface the creature touches, allowing it to “unstick” itself simply by shifting its foot.

(more…)

Categories: Nanotubes · nanotech · nanotechnology

Multifunctional nanoparticle platforms for targeting and imaging cancer cells

July 7, 2007 · Leave a Comment

 

here has been much recent interest in how nanotechnology will impact the field of medicine. Unfortunately, a number of promising nanostructured systems have turned out to be extremely toxic to humans, thus precluding their use in clinical applications and dashing hopes of an early success for the interdisciplinary field of nanobiotechnology. Now a group of researchers at the University of Michigan Nanotechnology Institute for Medicine and Biological Sciences have devised a multifunctional nanoparticle platform comprising nanoparticles synthesized within dendrimers equipped with targeting molecules and dyes. These dendrimer nanoparticle systems are able to seek out and specifically bind to cancer cells.

(more…)

Categories: Biology · Biomedical · Cancer · Nanoparticles · nanotech · nanotechnology

Bacteria ferry nanoparticles into cells for early diagnosis, treatment

July 7, 2007 · 1 Comment

Researchers at Purdue University have shown that common bacteria can deliver a valuable cargo of “smart nanoparticles” into a cell to precisely position sensors, drugs or DNA for the early diagnosis and treatment of various diseases.

The approach represents a potential way to overcome hurdles in delivering cargo to the interiors of cells, where they could be used as an alterative technology for gene therapy, said Rashid Bashir, a researcher at Purdue’s Birck Nanotechnology Center.

 

(more…)

Categories: Biology · Biomedical · DNA · Nanoparticles · nanotech · nanotechnology