Sequence-Detecting Nanoscale Sensor
Makarand writes "A nanoscale sensor made of a single molecule - just 20 nanometers long - capable of detecting a specific
short sequence in a mix of DNA or RNA molecules has been created by physicists at UCLA. This nanoscale
sensor could be used to detect the early stages of cancers for which genetic markers are well known or extremely minute traces of biological weapons.
When a target molecule binds to the probe molecule in the sensor,
the probe molecule changes shape and pulls on the sensor. The motion of the sensor is detected
by an optical technique to measure conformational changes in the probe molecule at the nanometer scale."
How was it, again? Oh yeah, just stop cells from aging and find a cure for cancer.
It's a good start, but clearly there's a long way to go before it is more than just a 'lab' tool.
Two Rules For Success:
1) Never tell people everything you know.
... you have to get the molecule to the sensor. I would think you would need a huge array of the nanoscale devices to cover a decent area. I didn't see mention of how to "unbind" the molecule so the device could be reused?
This could lead to walk-through portals that detect contagious diseases like SARS. Detection is now too slow for use in airports, but something like this could change all that.
There are a million ways molecule can attach to another depending on a number of variables such as placement of electrons and atoms in the molecule. I'm thinking, with all those possibilities, it would seem that the best way to simulate all those possibilities and pick out which molecules to use to bind with certain parts of DNA would be to develop a distributed computing project such as folding and Seti. I don't entirely understand HOW they are able to detect such deformities in the DNA with a single molecule, but given they can develop a method to accurately sense them, I'd imagine that it would take a heck of a lot of computing power to match the deformity up with a molecule. Just my tired two cents worth.
I came, I saw, She conquered.
I just skimmed the article late this evening (early this morning? Whatever.). Anyway, it looked like what they'd done was to attach a single-stranded DNA sequence at one end to a slide, the other end is attached to a 1-micrometer diameter bead. Charge repulsion between the bead and the slide stretches the DNA strand, keeping it under tension. DNA with various sequences then can be introduced into the system, if they match the opposite strand of the fixed DNA strand well, then it will hybridize forming a double stranded DNA. Double stranded DNA forms a double helix structure which is more "fixed" structure than single stranded DNA, which can range from nearly linear to a random coil depending in part in the amount of tension its under and the sequence. Regardless, if there is a hit then the distance between the bead and the slide will change as the DNA is hybridized into a double strand, forming the double helix that we've all seen in biology textbooks. One problem is that multiple different DNA strands can hybridize nearly as tightly as an exact match, for example if we have the sequence 5' ACTGACTGACTG 3' then 5' CAGTCAGTCAGT 3' will bing to it, but so will 5' CAGTCAATCAGT 3', which differs by only one position. I hope I did that right, it's late, but anyway you can still get hybridization of DNA molecules that are only very similar but are not quite identical. This study used DNA strands 10's of nucleotides long so being off by one or even a couple of positions will still result in tight binding, although this can be tweaked a bit by messing with the DNA concentration; lower concentrations will favor more exact matches in general. But still, cool idea.
For those in the field, imagine being able to assay the ammount of your transcript of interest in an RNA sample as easily as you are able to measure total RNA. Pop a cuvette in a specialized spec and get a reading? You could have your answer in seconds as opposed to hours. Granted, the tech is not at that point yet, but it could easily get there in a few years.
Again I ask....what company is buying this? I want stock in them NOW.
There is a reason for everything. Sometimes that reason just sucks.
How about a chip with thousands of those sensors? It could detect all known hereditary illnesses.
However, would you want to know?
It seems to me once this technology is refined that even a negative result could tell us much about a gene sequence by identifying which variant isn't present. This is espescially the case if several nano scanners are used in parallel. Also, it could help identify whether an engineered gene has been successfully been integrated before allowing the organism to mature. Clearly this technology has many possiblilities for the future.