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Nano
Probe May Open New Window Into Cell Behavior
Georgia Tech invention captures
cell properties and biochemical signals in action
Georgia
Tech’s SMS Probe gently pulls biomolecules precisely at
a specific point on the cell/tissue surface, ionizes these
biomolecules and produces “dry” ions suitable for
analysis and then transports those ions to the mass
spectrometer.
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ATLANTA
(July 24, 2006) — To create drugs capable of targeting some
of the most devastating human diseases, scientists must first
decode exactly how a cell or a group of cells communicates with
other cells and reacts to a broad spectrum of complex
biomolecules surrounding it.
But even the most sophisticated
tools currently used for studying cell communications suffer from
significant deficiencies. Typically, these tools can detect only
a narrowly selected group of small molecules or, for a more
sophisticated analysis, the cells must be destroyed for sample
preparation. This makes it very difficult to observe complex
cellular interactions just as they would occur in their natural
habitat — the human body.
Georgia Tech researchers
have created a nanoscale probe, the Scanning Mass Spectrometry
(SMS) probe, that can capture both the biochemical makeup and
topography of complex biological objects in their normal
environment — opening the door for discovery of new
biomarkers and improved gene studies, leading to better disease
diagnosis and drug design on the cellular level. The research was
presented in the July issue of IEEE Electronics Letters. The
new instrument, a potentially very valuable tool for the emerging
science of systems biology, may help researchers better
understand cellular interactions at the most fundamental level,
including cell signaling, as well as identifying protein
expression and response to the external stimuli (e.g., exposure
to drugs or changes in the environment) from the organ scale down
to tissue and even the single cell level.
“At its
core, disease is a disruption of normal cell signaling,”
said Dr. Andrei Fedorov, a professor in Georgia Tech’s
Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering and lead researcher on
the project. “So, if one understands the network and all
signals on the most fundamental level, one would be able to
control and correct them if needed. The SMS probe can help map
all those complex and intricate cellular communication pathways
by probing cell activities in the natural cellular environment.”
The SMS probe offers the capability to gently pull
biomolecules (proteins, metabolites, peptides) precisely at a
specific point on the cell/tissue surface, ionize these
biomolecules and produce “dry” ions suitable for
analysis and then transport those ions to the mass spectrometer
(an instrument that can detect proteins present even in
ultra-small concentrations by measuring the relative masses of
ionized atoms and molecules) for identification. The probe does
this dynamically (not statically), imaging the surface and
mapping cellular activities and communication potentially in real
time. In essence, in scanning mode, the SMS probe could create
images similar to movies of cell biochemical activities with high
spatial and temporal resolution.
The SMS probe can be
readily integrated with the Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) or
other scanning probes, and can not only image biochemical
activity but also monitor the changes in the cell/tissue topology
during the imaging.
“The probe potentially allows
us to detect complex mechano-bio-electro-chemical events
underlying cell communication, all at the same time!”
Fedorov said. “The future work is in refinement of the idea
and development of a versatile instrument that can be used by
biological and medical scientists in advancing the frontiers of
biomedical research.”
The key challenge for the
Georgia Tech team, which includes Dr. Levent Degertekin, was to
create a way for a mass spectrometer, the primary tool for
studying proteins, to sample biomolecules from a small domain and
do it dynamically, thus enabling biochemical imaging. The
researchers had to find a way to pull the targeted molecules out
of the sample, as if they were using virtual tweezers, and then
transfer these molecules into a dry and electrically charged
state suitable for mass spectrometric analysis.
The
solution to the problem came from a trick related to the basic
fluid mechanics of ionic fluids, as the researchers exploited
strong capillary forces to confine fluid within a nanoscale
domain of the probe inlet (enabling natural separation of liquid
and gaseous environments) and then used the classical Taylor
electrohydrodynamic focusing of the jets to produce charged ions,
but in reverse (pull) rather than in a commonly-used forward
(push) mode.
Source
/ Credit: Georgia Institute of Technology
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