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February 2, 2007|Volume 35, Number 16


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This image illustrates how the nanowires created using a new method devised by Mark Reed's laboratory operate in a solution.



Synthesis breakthrough allows
nanowires to act as biodetectors

A team of Yale scientists has developed a novel approach to synthesizing nanowires (NWs), which allows them to integrate directly with microelectronic systems for the first time and to act as highly sensitive biomolecule detectors -- a discovery that could revolutionize biological diagnostic applications, according to a report in Nature.

"We electronically plugged into the biochemical system of cells," says senior author Mark Reed, the Harold Hodgkinson Professor of Engineering & Applied Science. "These developments have profound implications both for application of nanoscience technologies and for the speed and sensitivity they bring to the future of diagnostics."

An interdisciplinary team of engineers at the Yale Institute for Nanoscience and Quantum Engineering has overcome hurdles in NW synthesis by using a tried-and-true process of wet-etch lithography on commercially available silicon-on-insulator wafers. These NWs are structurally stable and demonstrate an unprecedented sensitivity as sensors for detection of antibodies and other biologically important molecules.

According to Reed, not only can the NWs detect minute concentrations (as few as 1,000 individual molecules in a cubic millimeter), they can do it without the hazard or inconvenience of any added fluorescent or radioactive detection probes.

The study demonstrated the ability of the NWs to monitor antibody binding, and to sense real-time live cellular immune response using T-lymphocyte activation as a model. Within approximately 10 seconds, the NW could register T-cell activation. The basis for the sensors is the detection of hydrogen ions or acidity, within the physiological range of reactions in the body. Traditional assays for detection of immune system cells such as T cells or for antibodies usually take hours to complete.

"The ability to differentiate between immune system cells based on their function and with label-free reagents is key for rapid and reliable diagnostics as well as for advancing basic science," says co-author Tarek Fahmy, assistant professor of biomedical engineering. "These nanosensors can replace current technology with a solid-state device, and the results promise to radically change the way we assay for these cells."

Graduate student Eric Stern, lead author of the study, notes, "The sensor is essentially on the size scale of the molecules it is designed to sense." Stern's thesis work has focused on designing and building nanoscale chemical and biological sensors. His project was funded by the Department of Defense and placed high importance on the capability of detecting multiple molecules, including pathogens.

Fahmy explains: "You can think of the process of making the nanowires as sculpting. It can either be done by working down from the rock or up from the clay -- we carved down from the rock. Previous approaches used the equivalent of a hacksaw; we used a molecular chisel. We were able to make exactly what we wanted with the most traditional technology out there."

According to Stern, "We not only got the high-quality smooth surface we wanted, but we were also able to make them smaller than we originally defined. Using the robust 'old fashioned' technology of lithography gives us manufacturing uniformity."

The authors say that although this study focuses on device and sensor performance, the strength of the approach lies in seamless integration with complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology, and that the approach "appears to have potential for extension to a fully integrated system, with wide use as sensors in molecular and cellular arrays."

Paul Fleury, dean of Yale Engineering and director of the institute, says: "This project is a powerful demonstration of what we are trying to achieve in the Yale Institute of Nanoscience and Quantum Engineering. It was a remarkable collaboration of biomedical, electrical and mechanical engineering with chemistry and applied physics that worked for all of us. And a dedicated graduate student with a focused idea made it happen."

Other authors on the paper were James F. Klemic, David A. Routenberg, Pauline N. Wyrembak, Daniel Turner-Evans, Andrew D. Hamilton and David A. LaVan.

The research was funded by Yale University, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency of the Department of Defense, the Coulter Foundation, a Department of Homeland Security graduate fellowship, and a National Science Foundation graduate fellowship. This work was performed in part at the Cornell Nanoscale Science & Technology Facility, a member of the National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network, which is supported by the National Science Foundation.

-- By Janet Rettig Emanuel


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

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Team casts new light on roots of primate family tree

Study boosts theory that a virus causes 'mad cow' disease

Recent graduates tackling key Yale projects as Woodbridge Fellows

Federal grant to fund ongoing, multidisciplinary research on autism

Coliseum collapse was barely a blip, seismologically speaking

ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

Yale Journalism Initiative to provide support for summer work

Divinity School events to explore the Black church . . .

Symposium will examine 'The Ethics of Photography'

Third annual blood drive pits Bulldogs against Crimsons

In Memoriam: Asger Hartvig Aaboe

Drug company Marinus is focus of seminar

Dr. Edward Chu . . . appointed as deputy director of the Yale Cancer Center

Campus Notes

Yale Books in Brief


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