Home pagePress monitoringScientists get first look at nanotubes inside living animals

Scientists get first look at nanotubes inside living animals

Date: 27.9.2007 

Rice University scientists have captured the first optical images of **carbon nanotubes** inside a living organism. Using fruit flies, the researchers confirmed that a technique developed at Rice -- near-infrared fluorescent imaging -- was capable of detecting DNA-sized nanotubes inside living fruit flies. "Carbon nanotubes are much smaller than living cells, and they give off fluorescent light in a way that researchers hope to harness to detect diseases earlier than currently possible," said research co-author Bruce Weisman, professor of chemistry. "In order to do that, we need to learn how to detect and monitor **nanotubes** inside living tissues, and we must also determine whether they pose any hazards to organisms." Researchers have studied how carbon nanotubes interact with tissues of rabbits, mice and other animals, but Weisman and co-author Kathleen Beckingham, professor of biochemistry and cell biology, chose something smaller -- the fruit fly **Drosophila melanogaster** -- to attempt the first-ever detection of nanotubes inside a living animal. Whole article on "media.rice.edu":[ http://www.media.rice.edu/media/NewsBot.asp?MODE=VIEW&ID=10023&SnID=267255320]

 

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