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Nanotechnology at the interface of cell biology, materials science and medicine

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Andreas Engel1 and Mervyn Miles2

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EDITORIAL

The atomic force microscope (AFM) and related scanning probe microscopes have become resourceful tools to study cells, supramolecular assemblies and single biomolecules, because they allow investigations of such structures in native environments. Quantitative information has been gathered about the surface structure of membrane proteins to lateral and vertical resolutions of 0.5 nm and 0.1 nm, respectively, about the forces that keep protein–protein and protein–nucleic acid assemblies together as well as single proteins in their native conformation, and about the nanomechanical properties of cells in health and disease. Such progress has been achieved mainly because of constant development of AFM instrumentation and sample preparation methods.

This special issue of Nanotechnology presents papers from leading laboratories in the field of nanobiology, covering a wide range of topics in the form of original and novel scientific contributions. It addresses achievements in instrumentation, sample preparation, automation and in biological applications. These papers document the creativity and persistence of researchers pursuing the goal to unravel the structure and dynamics of cells, supramolecuar structures and single biomolecules at work. Improved cantilever sensors, novel optical probes, and quantitative data on supports for electrochemical experiments open new avenues for characterizing biological nanomachines down to the single molecule. Comparative measurements of healthy and metastatic cells promise new methods for early detection of tumors, and possible assessments of drug efficacy. High-speed AFMs document possibilities to monitor crystal growth and to observe large structures at video rate. A wealth of information on amyloid-type fibers as well as on membrane proteins has been gathered by single molecule force spectroscopy—a technology now being automated for large-scale data collection.

With the progress of basic research and a strong industry supporting instrumentation development by improving robustness and reliability and making new instruments available to the community, nanobiology has the potential to develop into a field with great impact on our understanding of the complexity of life, and to provide a major contribution to human health.

This special issue of Nanotechnology on nanobiology would not have been possible without the highly professional support from Nina Couzin, Amy Harvey and the Nanotechnology team at IOP Publishing. We are thankful for their most constructive and effective help in pushing the project forward. We are also thankful to all the authors who have contributed with excellent original articles, as well as to the referees who have helped to make this special issue such an insightful document of a rapidly moving field.


Dates

Issue 38 (24 September 2008)



  1. Nanotechnology at the interface of cell biology, materials science and medicine

    Andreas Engel and Mervyn Miles 2008 Nanotechnology 19 380201

  2. High-speed AFM of human chromosomes in liquid

    L M Picco et al 2008 Nanotechnology 19 384018

  3. Single-step chemical synthesis of ferrite hollow nanospheres

    Enio Lima Jr et al 2009 Nanotechnology 20 045606

  4. Geometry of entangled states, Bloch spheres and Hopf fibrations

    Rémy Mosseri and Rossen Dandoloff 2001 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 34 10243

  5. Exploring the consequences of attractive and repulsive interaction regimes in tapping mode atomic force microscopy of DNA

    Andrew N Round and Mervyn J Miles 2004 Nanotechnology 15 S176

  6. A chlorite mineral surface actively drives the deposition of DNA molecules in stretched conformations

    Massimo Antognozzi et al 2006 Nanotechnology 17 3897

  7. An NMR rotation operator disentanglement strategy for establishing properties of the Euler - Rodrigues parameters

    David J Siminovitch and Simon Habot 1997 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 30 2577

  8. Orbits of quantum states and geometry of Bloch vectors for N-level systems

    S G Schirmer et al 2004 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 37 1389

  9. The dependence of initial states on the excitation of NO molecules by chirped infrared laser pulses

    J T Lin and T F Jiang 2000 J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys. 33 3023

  10. A dressed atom interpretation of adiabatic rapid passage

    J C Camparo and R P Frueholz 1984 J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Phys. 17 4169

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