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Researchers To Develop Active Nanoscale Surfaces for Biological Separations
Troy, N.Y. — A team of researchers has received a four-year,
$1 million grant from the National Science Foundation to study
improved methods for biological separations. Led by Ravi Kane,
the Merck Associate Professor of Chemical and Biological
Engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, the group
plans to develop nanoscale surfaces that actively reassemble in
the presence of DNA, which could eventually lead to more
efficient separation tools for genomics and
proteomics.
The researchers are taking their inspiration from nature,
mimicking the very membranes that surround our cells to create
platforms for separating biological molecules. These “lipid
bilayers,” which are made up of two opposing layers of fat
molecules, act as the cell’s barrier to the outside world. DNA
molecules move on these surfaces in two dimensions, much like
objects on a conveyor belt. Kane and his colleagues recently
discovered that the mobility of DNA molecules is closely
coupled to the movement of the underlying lipid bilayer.
“The advantage of these surfaces is that they can be
actively modified,” Kane said. “Thus by changing the
temperature, shining light, or applying an electric field, we
propose to change the behavior of the surfaces.” In one
approach, Kane and his colleagues are building a molecular
obstacle course made up of nanoscale domains. When an electric
field is applied at one end, DNA molecules will move across the
surface and collide with the obstacles, impeding their motion.
The researchers have already made surfaces on which they can
control the size and positioning of obstacles; next, they plan
to test the movement of DNA.
The overarching goal is to understand how biological
molecules of all types move across the surface of lipid
bilayers. “This particular project is focused on DNA, but the
approach could potentially be used for separating other
biological molecules, such as proteins,” Kane said. He
envisions immediate applications in genomics and proteomics,
with the new approach providing several improvements over
current techniques.
The new surfaces could yield separations with higher
resolution and greater efficiency, Kane suggested. And they can
be easily fabricated in a normal laboratory, whereas other
surfaces require the use of a clean room. The nanoscale
surfaces are also dynamic, while the materials in use today
cannot be altered once they have been made.
In the more distant future, the surfaces could even be used
as biosensors or to deliver DNA molecules for gene therapy
applications, Kane said.
The funding is part of a National Science Foundation program
to develop Nanoscale Interdisciplinary Research Teams (NIRT) to
catalyze synergistic research and education in emerging areas
of nanoscale science and technology.
Other researchers involved with the project include
Professor Steve Granick at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, Professor Sanat Kumar at Columbia University,
Professor Omkaram Nalamasu at Rensselaer, and Chakradhar
Padala, a doctoral student in chemical and biological
engineering at Rensselaer.
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Published
October 6,
2006 |
Contact: Jason Gorss
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: gorssj@rpi.edu |
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