Lining up proteins for nanotechnology

Advanced nanotech might benefit if proteins could be arrayed on a surface so that they could be quickly and easily scanned for function or interactions with other molecules.

Nanotechnology tailors carbon nanotubes to deliver cancer treatment in mice

In a study with breast cancer in mice, a nanotech cancer therapy suppresses tumor growth with minimal side effects.

Nanotechnology combines two different types of nanoparticles for more antibacterial action

A combination of silver and calcium phosphate nanoparticles provides an even more effective nanotech antiseptic.

Nanotechnology shows longer particles better to enter cancer cells

Long particles are internalized by cancer cells more efficiently than are round particles.

Nanotechnology delivers safer MRI contrast agent to image clots

A novel toroidal-shaped nanoparticle provides a nanotech way to image blood clots without using magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents that are toxic to some patients.

Activating cancer-fighting cells using nanotechnology

Single walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) bundles may provide a nanotech method to activate certain cancer-fighting white blood cells outside a patient’s body in the hope that they will more effectively fight the patient’s cancer upon being returned to the patient.

Roundup and removal of cancer cells using nanotechnology

A nanotech method to capture cancer cells and remove them from the body might be useful for combating ovarian cancer, in particular.

Nanotechnology may be able to deliver drugs across the blood-brain barrier

Researchers expect protein-conjugated quantum rods to be able to transport multiple agents across the blood-brain barrier so that they could function synergistically.

Nanotechnology therapies for cancer progress, block metastasis

In experiments in mice, chemotherapy drugs encapsulated in nanoparticles targeted to the blood vessels that supply nutrients to tumor cells prevented the usually fatal spread of the cancer to additional sites.

Nanotechnology may allow hip implants to sense growth of new bone

The nanotech-prepared titanium surface serves as a sensor to detect bone formation.

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