麻豆淫院

January 13, 2014

Developing methods for building precise nanostructures

Researchers at Case Western Reserve University have received a $540,000 federal grant to devise methods for building minute structures tailored to precisely deliver medicines to tumors or carry dyes that help imaging technologies detect disease, create more efficient nanowires and nanoelectonics, and more.

Building precisely defined structures on the nanoscale has proven a challenge for chemists. To provide control and precision, the researchers propose to build complex nanostructures on scaffolds made of plant viruses, tiny organisms that infect plant cells but are benign outside the plant.

Jon Pokorski, assistant professor of macromolecular science and engineering, and Nicole Steinmetz, assistant professor of , will use the three-year grant from the National Science Foundation's Macromolecular, Supramolecular and Nanochemistry Program to test three methods of synthesizing rod-shaped nanostructures.

Typically, scientists build nanopolymers from small that self-assemble and are used to make films, supercrystals and devices. But there are always imperfections in the assembly.

"By using a template鈥攖he virus鈥攚e can produce an evenly dispersed polymer coating that yields more consistent and efficient properties," Pokorski said. "And this is very modular; it can be applied to lots of uses."

By controlling the size and surface features, they hope to reduce or eliminate the toxic side effects that can be caused by those two properties during drug delivery, he said.

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Steinmetz, an appointee of the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine, will build the templates using . Instead of making spheres, the goal is to make materials that are considerably longer than they are wide, called "high-aspect" materials.

"The physical property makes them more useful for nanowires and electronics and applications in the body," she said.

The tobacco virus particles are about 300 nanometers by 18 nanometers, but Steinmetz will control sizes using genetic engineering, "which gives us more control than we could have using purely chemical production methods," she said.

Pokorski will add polymers. The rod shape allows a polymer with one function鈥攕uch as carrying medicine鈥攖o be tied to one end, and another with a different function鈥攕uch as carrying an imaging dye鈥攖o the other.

"Or," he explained, "we can grow one polymer on the exterior and a different polymer on the interior because the plant virus is a hollow tube."

In addition to using nanoparticles as vehicles to carry medicines to specific targets, they could be used as electrical connectors, replacing carbon nanotubes used to link nanoelectronics.

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