Nano World: Acid sensors for cells

Jul 17, 2006

Scientists have devised the first sensors only nanometers or billionths of a meter long that can detect how acidic the environment around them is, experts told UPI's Nano World.

These sensors give biologists the first means of accurately measuring acidity, or pH, over a wide range in real time inside living cells and tissues. This could help determine, for instance, whether or not some cancers are malignant. Current methods would evaluate a piece of tumor removed via biopsy, a painful and invasive procedure. These new sensors could in the future get used to measure the pH levels inside the cancer with nothing more invasive than an injection.

"Every time I talk with biologists or bioengineers, they're all very excited about what they can measure or discover with these," said lead researcher Naomi Halas, director of Rice University's nanophotonics laboratory in Houston.

The sensors are made from nanoshells. These nanoparticles, each hundreds of times smaller than a cell, consist of tiny cores of non-conducting silica covered with thin shells of metal, usually gold. The metal shells can get tuned to absorb or scatter specific wavelengths of light.

To create the pH nanosensor, Halas and her team coated the nanoshells with a pH-sensitive compound known as pMBA, or paramercaptobenzoic acid. When placed in solutions of varying pH and illuminated with lasers working in near-infrared wavelengths, the sensors provided minute but easily discernable changes in the property of the scattered light. When decoded, these changes can determine the pH of the sensors' local environment to a remarkably high accuracy of a tenth of a pH unit. "That is the most interesting aspect, the accuracy," chemist Richard Van Duyne at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., said.

In comparison with pH-sensitive dyes, which are excited by and emit visible light, "greatly restricting their use in living systems," these pH nanosensors are excited by and emit near-infrared light, which can readily penetrate tissues and blood, Halas said. The pH-sensitive dyes also leak from cells, "which prevents their use for local nanoscale pH measurements, and are unable to provide a continuous signal across a broad pH range."

These nanosensors could aid cell transplants designed to help diabetes patients. Islet cells produce insulin and other hormones in the pancreas and get destroyed in diabetes. "Islet cells seem to be the only potential cure for diabetes, but there are many technical problems with transplanting individual cells. Where do they go, do they stay alive or die, how do you track them?" Halas said. Monitoring changes in pH could help see whether transplanted cells are dead or viable and generating insulin, she explained.

In the future, Halas and her colleagues may license and develop or sublicense these devices to Nanospectra Biosciences in Houston, which she helped found. Halas and her colleagues reported their findings in the journal Nano Letters.

Copyright 2006 by United Press International

Explore further: Professor's coatings could help medical implants function better

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Studying 'squid skin' to create new camouflage patterns

May 19, 2011

As an octopus, a squid, or a cuttlefish moves around a reef in the ocean, it instantly camouflages itself against the background. Known as cephalopods, these animals have the extraordinary ability to conceal ...

Researchers shed new light on catalyzed reactions

Nov 19, 2008

Rice University scientists on the hunt for a better way to clean up the stubborn pollutant TCE have created a method that lets them watch molecules break down on the surface of a catalyst as individual chemical bonds are ...

Study shows nanoshells ideal as chemical nanosensors

Jan 11, 2005

'Nanoshells' enhance sensitivity to chemical detection by factor of 10 billion New research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science finds that tailored nanoparticles known as nanoshells can enhanc ...

Recommended for you

Sweet solutions for detecting disease

16 hours ago

Based at the Institute of Chemistry in the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Ján Tkáč's research combines glycomics – the study of sugars in organisms – with biochip sensors based on nanoparticles and nanotubes. ...

Nanoparticles for controlled drug release

Jun 13, 2013

Scientists from CIC bioGUNE and the Laboratoire de Chimie des Polymères Organiques (LCPO) in Bordeaux have jointly undertaken a project to develop "smart" nanoparticles. These polymeric particles act as "nanomissiles" against ...

User comments : 0

More news stories

Sound waves precisely position nanowires

(Phys.org) —The smaller components become, the more difficult it is to create patterns in an economical and reproducible way, according to an interdisciplinary team of Penn State researchers who, using ...

Hybrid nanostructures: Getting to the core

Material scientists expect the new multifunctional properties of hybrid nanostructures will transform the development of high-performance devices, including batteries, high-sensitivity sensors and solar cells. ...