ADVERTISEMENTRSSADVERTISEWed Aug 20, 1:55:18 AM 
Today Career International Science & Tech. Management Medical Engineering Law IIMs IITs Universities States
                        
Search        Advanced Search




Nanotubes could aid understanding of retrovirus transmission between human cells

June 25, 2008  |  RSS   |  Tell a friend  |  Printable Version
 Font Size  


How to form lipid nanotubes, simply and easily

Recent findings by medical researchers indicate that naturally occurring nanotubes may serve as tunnels that protect retroviruses and bacteria in transit from diseased to healthy cells — a fact that may explain why vaccines fare poorly against some invaders.

To better study the missions of these intercellular nanotubes, scientists have sought the means to form them quickly and easily in test tubes.

Sandia National Laboratories researchers have now learned serendipitously to form nanotubes with surprising ease.

"Our work is the first to show that the formation of nanotubes is not complicated, but can be a general effect of protein-membrane interactions alone," says Darryl Sasaki of Sandia's Bioscience and Energy Center.

Sandia is a National Nuclear Security Administration laboratory.

The tunnel-like structures have been recognized only recently as tiny but important bodily channels for the good, the bad, and the informational.

In addition to providing protected transport to certain diseases, the nanotubes also seem to help trundle bacteria to their doom in the tentacles of microphages. Lastly, the nanotubes may provide avenues to send and receive information (in the form of chemical molecules) from cell to cell far faster than their random dispersal into the bloodstream would permit.

Given the discovery of this radically different transportation system operating within human tissues, it was natural for researchers to attempt to duplicate the formation of the nanotubes. In their labs, they experimented with giant lipid vesicles that appeared to mimic key aspects of the cellular membrane.

Giant lipid vesicles resemble micron-sized spherical soap bubbles that exist in water. They are composed of a lipid bilayer membrane only five nanometers thick.

The object for experimenters was to create conditions in which the spheres would morph into cylinders of nanometer radii.

But researchers had difficulties, says Sasaki, perhaps because they used a composite lipid called egg PC that requires unnecessarily high energies to bend into a tubular shape.

Egg PC is inexpensive, readily available, and offers good, stable membrane properties. It is the usual lipid of choice in forming nanocylinders via mechanical stretching techniques.

But Sandia postdoctoral researcher Haiqing Lui instead used POPC — a single pure lipid requiring half the bending energy of egg PC.

She was trying to generate nanotubes by a completely different approach that involved the use of motor proteins to stretch naturally occurring membranes into tubes.

Working with Sandia researcher George Bachand, she serendipitously found that interaction of the POPC membrane with a high affinity protein called streptavidin alone was enough to form the nanotubes.

"Perhaps this information — linking membrane bending energy with nanotube formation — may provide some clue about the membrane structure and the cell's ability to form such intercellular connections," Sasaki says.

The formation was confirmed by Sandia researcher Carl Hayden, who characterized the nanotube formation through a confocal imaging microscope. The custom instrument allows pixel-by-pixel examination of the protein interaction with the membranes comprising the nanotubes by detecting the spectrum and lifetimes of fluorescent labels on the proteins.

Nanotube formation had been noticed previously by cell biologists, but they had dismissed the tiny outgrowths as "junk — an aberration of cells growing in culture," says Sasaki. "The reason they were only noticed recently as trafficking routes is because of labeling studies that marked organelles and proteins. This allowed a focused look at what these nanostructures might be used for."

It became clear, says Sasaki, that the organelles were being transported with "specific directionality" on the backs of motor proteins within the tubes, rather than randomly.

Three-dimensional networks of nanotubes also are found to be created by macrophages — part of the police force of the body — grown in culture, says George. The tubes in appearance and function resemble a kind of spider web, capturing bacterium and transporting them to the macrophages, which eat them.

Other paper authors include postdoc Hahkjoon Kim and summer intern Elsa Abate.

The lipid work is supported by Sandia's Laboratory Directed Research and Development office. Motor protein work is supported by DOE's Office of Basic Energy Sciences.

Source: sflorg.com

Add to favorites   Tell a friend   Report error   Printable Version
Related News
· Signs of Alzheimer's disease may be present decades before diagnosis
· Lower educational achievement may be early Alzheimer's sign
· NASA Confirms Liquid Lake On Saturn Moon
· Space scientists at UCLA solve the mystery behind aurora borealis
· Cracking the Secrets of Ice
· Lenses galore - Hubble finds large sample of very distant galaxies
· 'Nanonet' circuits closer to making flexible electronics reality
· Outdoor enthusiasts scaring off native carnivores in parks
· Engineers Prove Graphene is the Strongest Material
· 'No Organics' Zone Around Pinwheel Galaxy
May-June 2007
 
  Latest News
Today Career International Science/Tech. Others


there is no record


there is no record
Conversation

Previous Interviews
E-Poll
Edu Search
Search Anything About Education   
 powered by EduSearch.in
Quick Links - National Network of Education
Universities/Institutes
IITs, IIMs, NITs, Universities, IIITs, Important Institutes, Top Institute Search, Coaching, World's Top Universities

Education
Management, Engineering, Medical, Science, Humanities, Law, Commerce, Agriculture, Computers/IT, Mass Communication, Study Abroad, Distance Education, Correspondence, Online Education, Vocational, Part-time, Open Courseware
Daily Updates
Educational News, Notifications, Announcements, Exam Alerts, Exam Results

Exams
Entrance Exams, Civil Services, International Exams, Exam Updates/Notifications, Exam Results
Careers
Career Guidance, Class XI th, After Class XII th, Career Options, Stress Management
Resources
Educational Loans, Scholarships, Students, Teachers, Parents
Share / Connect
Press Releases, Articles, Forums, EduPal, Feedback, Report Error

NNE’s Channels
IndiaEducation.net,   IndiaEdunews.net,   ExamResults.Net,   EduStore.Biz,   EduAds.Net,   EduPal.In,   EduSearch.In
North Zone
Delhi
Haryana
Himachal
Jammu Kashmir
Punjab
Rajasthan
Uttaranchal
Chandigarh

South Zone
Andhra
Hyderabad
Andaman
Tamilnadu
Chennai

Karnataka
Bangalore
Kerala
Lakshadweep
Pondicherry

East Zone
Bihar
Orissa
Kolkata
West Bengal
West Zone
Ahmedabad
Damandiu
Dadra Nagar Haveli
Goa
Gujarat
Mumbai
Maharashtra
Pune
North East Zone
Assam
Arunachal
Mizoram
Meghalaya
Manipur
Nagaland
Sikkim
Tripura
Central Zone
Chhattisgarh
Jharkhand
MP
UP
Other Channels:    Pan India Network, Festivals of India, Greetings, Jokes, Weather, Child, Chatting

 About Us  |  Advertise With Us  |  Feedback  |  Contact Us  |  Mission Education  |  Report error on this site  |  Work for us

2000-08 All rights reserved worldwide - National Network of Education
Project & Websites Developed by Pragati Infosoft Pvt. Ltd. India. Please see Disclaimer and Privacy policy