PASADENA,
Calif.-Physicists at the California Institute of Technology
have created the first nanodevices capable of weighing
individual biological molecules. This technology may
lead to new forms of molecular identification that
are cheaper and faster than existing methods, as well
as revolutionary new instruments for proteomics.
According to Michael Roukes,
professor of physics, applied physics, and bioengineering
at Caltech and the founding director of Caltech's
Kavli Nanoscience Institute, the technology his group
has announced this week shows the immense potential
of nanotechnology for creating transformational new
instrumentation for the medical and life sciences.
The new devices are at the nanoscale, he explains,
since their principal component is significantly less
than a millionth of a meter in width.
The Caltech devices are "nanoelectromechanical
resonators"--essentially tiny tuning forks about
a micron in length and a hundred or so nanometers
wide that have a very specific frequency at which
they vibrate when excited. Just as a bronze bell rings
at a certain frequency based on its size, shape, and
composition, these tiny tuning forks ring at their
own fundamental frequency of mechanical vibration,
although at such a high pitch that the "notes"
are nearly as high in frequency as microwaves.
The researchers set up electronic
circuitry to continually excite and monitor the frequency
of the vibrating bar. Intermittently, a shutter is
opened to expose the nanodevice to an atomic or molecular
beam, in this case a very fine "spray" of
xenon atoms or nitrogen molecules. Because the nanodevice
is cooled, the molecules condense on the bar and add
their mass to it, thereby lowering its frequency.
In other words, the mechanical vibrations of the now
slightly-more-massive nanodevice become slightly lower
in frequency--just as thicker, heavier strings on
an instrument sound notes that are lower than lighter
ones.
Because frequency can be measured
so precisely in physics labs, the researchers are
then able to evaluate extremely subtle changes in
mass of the nanodevice, and therefore, the weight
of the added atoms or molecules.
Roukes says that their current
generation of devices is sensitive to added mass at
the level of a few zeptograms, which is few billionths
of a trillionth of a gram. In their experiments this
represents about thirty xenon atoms-- and it is the
typical mass of an individual protein molecule.
"We hope to transform
this chip-based technology into systems that are useful
for picking out and identifying specific molecules,
one-by-one--for example certain types of proteins
secreted in the very early stages of cancer,"
Roukes says.
"The fundamental problem
with identifying these proteins is that one must sort
through millions of molecules to make the measurement.
You need to be able to pick out the 'needle' from
the 'haystack,' and that's hard to do, among other
reasons because 95 percent of the proteins in the
blood have nothing to do with cancer."
The new method might ultimately
permit the creation of microchips, each possessing
arrays of miniature mass spectrometers, which are
devices for identifying molecules based on their weight.
Today, high-throughput proteomics searches are often
done at facilities possessing arrays of conventional
mass spectrometers that fill an entire laboratory
and can cost upwards of a million dollars each, Roukes
adds. By contrast, future nanodevice-based systems
should cost a small fraction of today's technology,
and an entire massively-parallel nanodevice system
will probably ultimately fit on a desktop.
Roukes says his group has technology
in hand to push mass-sensing technology to even more
sensitive levels, probably to the point that individual
hydrogen atoms can be weighed. Such an intricately
accurate method of determining atomic-scale masses
would be quite useful in areas such as quantum optics,
in which individual atoms are manipulated.
The next step for Roukes' team
at Caltech is to engineer the interfaces so that individual
biological molecules can be weighed. For this, the
team will likely collaborate with various proteomics
labs for side-by-side comparisons of already known
information on the mass of biological molecules with
results obtained with the new method.
Roukes announced the technology
in Los Angeles on Wednesday, March 24, at a news conference
during the annual American Physical Society convention.
Further results will be published in the near future.
The Caltech team behind the
zepto result included Dr. Ya-Tang Yang, former graduate
student in applied physics, now at Applied Materials;
Dr. Carlo Callegari, former postdoctoral associate,
now a professor at the University of Graz, Austria;
Xiaoli Feng, current graduate student in electrical
engineering; and Dr. Kamil Ekinci former postdoctoral
associate, now a professor at Boston University.
Contact: Robert Tindol (626)
395-3631 tindol@caltech.edu
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