Home pagePress monitoringScientists look at worms for electronic wine nose

Scientists look at worms for electronic wine nose

Date: 19.8.2006 

An electronic nose might also be used to check passengers for traces of explosives at the final ground check before boarding planes or trains. Head researcher Stephen Trowell said on Friday scientists believe they will be able to artificially copy the way worms and insects process smells, allowing detailed measurements of subtle differences in wine and other food and drinks. But Trowell said the cybernose could also one day replace the sniffer dog for airport security, and could become a quick and non-invasive first medical test for some kinds of cancers. "At the moment, real-life wet noses are better than the instruments," Trowell told Reuters. "But there's a great need for something that you can rely on that is close to the performance of a biological nose." The A$4.5 million ($3.5 million) cybernose project is a collaboration between the Australian government's chief science body the CSIRO, the Australian National University and Monash University. He said worms and insects have simple genetic and nerve structures, which made it easy for scientists to examine how they used their acute senses of smell. "We can take worms, and using experiments, we can ask them questions about what they can smell. They move toward something they like and move away from something they don't like. And you can measure that," he said. He said once researchers understood how the worms and insects processed the smells, they could replicate the process in an electronic nose. He said the cybernose could be used in a way similar to a police alcohol breath-testing device to help with the early detection of disease, such as tuberculosis or lung cancer. Trowell said he hoped a product would be on the market in five to seven years. He hoped it would allow wine makers to know the best time to pick their grapes and to better tailor their wines to taste. Australia, a major wine-producing nation, produces about 1.4 billion litres of wine and brandy a year and exports more than 730 million litres worth about A$3 billion, mainly to Britain and the United States. But Trowell said the device would not replace traditional wine-making skills. "It won't change the wine. But it will make it much easier to achieve a higher quality of wine at every point." "Source":[ http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/articlenews.aspx?type=scienceNews&storyID=2006-08-11T113705Z_01_SYD41209_RTRIDST_0_SCIENCE-SCIENCE-CYBERNOSE-DC.XML]

 

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