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The grand interface: nano-bio-info

Consider that in 1970 the fabrication of a single transistor cost about 10 cents. The first Intel computer chip had 2300 transistors. This chip used 10,000 nanometer wide technology. The latest Intel Xeon processor (2014) uses 22 nanometer technology. These developments are driving down rapidly the costs of storage capacities and sequencing. In 1982 with the Intel 80386 chip, $1 bought several thousand transistors. By 2012, when chips contained as many as a billion transistors, $1 would buy 20 million transistors. Among other miracles, this has drastically reduced the cost of sequencing genes: less than a penny a pair. I leave it to you to imagine the future implications for preventative medicine.

The marriage of nano-bio and info technology is making deep inroads in detection and diagnosis of cancer, cardiac disease and severe traumatic injury. Researchers at Rice, M.D. Anderson and UTHSC have devised an inexpensive diagnostic nano-bio-info chip that promises to be quite effective in detecting both malignant and pre-malignant oral cancer and other diseases. With the chip, invasive, painful biopsies are not needed. Results are ready on the spot rather than days later, and the cost is affordable.

This chip is one of the growing number of biomarkers under development in nanomedicine. At present it is also being tested to detect heart attacks by analyzing saliva, with heartening results thus far. The chip works by deciphering body fluids such as saliva and blood to reveal unique chemical and biological constituents, and changes in them.

Tissue engineering, a field born less than 2 decades ago, is an excellent example of the grand interface. Traditional biomedical engineering used metals, polymers and ceramics to construct temporary or permanent replacements of body parts that interact minimally with surrounding tissue. I have one of those in my foot. These replacement parts often promote infections, wear out, and loosen with time. Tissue engineers take exactly the opposite approach: they design biologically active materials that interact extensively with adjacent tissues in order to facilitate the regeneration process. Blending materials and concepts from nanotechnology and information technology into biotechnology, the new field has begun to yield products for repair of damaged tissue. Skin for burn patients is already available from first generation tissue engineering. Tissue engineering more generally promises to allow fabrication of a range of spare human parts to replace diseased or spent ones, or even to improve functions of healthy tissue. Tissue engineering targets include bone, cartilage, blood substitutes and eventually a variety of organ replacements.

Already, scientists at Wake Forest University have grown gall bladders on artificial “scaffolds” of water soluble material. Seven patients have these new bladders, and they are still working. ( The Economist , February 20, 2010), while physicians in Europe have implanted lab-grown tracheas. In Japan several children are living with tissue-engineered cardiac blood vessels ( Science , Aug. 2011).

The second generation of tissue engineering is already upon us. Progress in rebuilding complex organs such as lungs will be difficult, but is no longer the stuff or science fiction. Tissue engineers, harnessing properties of intercellular communication, have even begun to induce in vivo heart muscle regeneration. If they are successful, it may be possible to generate muscle for a “cardiac muscle patch.” ( Science , February 12, 2010).

One new innovation in tissue engineering marries nanowires with human cells. In Sept. 2012 scientists from Harvard, MIT and other Boston-area universities announced the creation of Cyborg-like tissue, where a network of nanowires containing electrodes that will enable physicians to monitor changes in human tissue at levels not imagined before.

The third generation of tissue engineering is almost at hand. By 2020, engineers might deploy self-assembling nano-electronic components to create 3-D circuits to improve the tissue compatibility of implants. Especially promising are plans to print organs using inkjet technology to imprint stem cells. Scientists and engineers are adapting tissue engineering to deal with a multitude of medical problems such as kidney failure, atherosclerosis, spinal cord injuries, inflammations, age-related diseases, and osteoporosis. It now seems that there are only a few parts of the body that cannot be ultimately replaced with bio-artificial replications of body parts.

Conclusion: the nano-bio-info convergence

Nanotechnology will surely revolutionize energy and materials science. The potential for truly staggering applications of biotechnology as augmented by nano and information technology is also in little doubt. Whether much of this potential will be soon realized is, however, yet unclear. Financial constraints on transfer of innovations based on these technologies are loosening, but legal and regulatory constraints loom much larger than in past technological revolutions. In the U.S. the Food and Drug Administration has become increasingly risk-adverse in approving new genetic and nanotech treatments in medicine. And no one knows what the next session of congress will bring.

From genomics, biotechnology has already provided us with a complete parts list for humans. As a result of advances in wet nanotechnology and information technology, tissue engineering promises to provide widely available, inexpensive, and reliable spare parts for humans. If we can find ways to resolve ethical – and perhaps moral – issues raised by our fast-expanding capacities in these converging technologies, their economic and social impacts could be as profound and as positive as that wrought by any previous revolution in human history.

Even ten years ago, much of what we have discussed today seemed impossible. What can we say about that? We may close with a pithy quote from Arthur C. Clarke, the writer who first envisioned the idea of artificial earth satellites: “The only way to discover the limits to the possible is to venture a little past them – to the impossible.”

Developing nations who hope to successfully cope with the potential challenges arising from 21st century technology will clearly need to focus very strongly on programs of education and research that steadily enhances and expands the stock of human capital.

Questions & Answers

how did you get 1640
Noor Reply
If auger is pair are the roots of equation x2+5x-3=0
Peter Reply
Wayne and Dennis like to ride the bike path from Riverside Park to the beach. Dennis’s speed is seven miles per hour faster than Wayne’s speed, so it takes Wayne 2 hours to ride to the beach while it takes Dennis 1.5 hours for the ride. Find the speed of both bikers.
MATTHEW Reply
420
Sharon
from theory: distance [miles] = speed [mph] × time [hours] info #1 speed_Dennis × 1.5 = speed_Wayne × 2 => speed_Wayne = 0.75 × speed_Dennis (i) info #2 speed_Dennis = speed_Wayne + 7 [mph] (ii) use (i) in (ii) => [...] speed_Dennis = 28 mph speed_Wayne = 21 mph
George
Let W be Wayne's speed in miles per hour and D be Dennis's speed in miles per hour. We know that W + 7 = D and W * 2 = D * 1.5. Substituting the first equation into the second: W * 2 = (W + 7) * 1.5 W * 2 = W * 1.5 + 7 * 1.5 0.5 * W = 7 * 1.5 W = 7 * 3 or 21 W is 21 D = W + 7 D = 21 + 7 D = 28
Salma
Devon is 32 32​​ years older than his son, Milan. The sum of both their ages is 54 54​. Using the variables d d​ and m m​ to represent the ages of Devon and Milan, respectively, write a system of equations to describe this situation. Enter the equations below, separated by a comma.
Aaron Reply
find product (-6m+6) ( 3m²+4m-3)
SIMRAN Reply
-42m²+60m-18
Salma
what is the solution
bill
how did you arrive at this answer?
bill
-24m+3+3mÁ^2
Susan
i really want to learn
Amira
I only got 42 the rest i don't know how to solve it. Please i need help from anyone to help me improve my solving mathematics please
Amira
Hw did u arrive to this answer.
Aphelele
hi
Bajemah
-6m(3mA²+4m-3)+6(3mA²+4m-3) =-18m²A²-24m²+18m+18mA²+24m-18 Rearrange like items -18m²A²-24m²+42m+18A²-18
Salma
complete the table of valuesfor each given equatio then graph. 1.x+2y=3
Jovelyn Reply
x=3-2y
Salma
y=x+3/2
Salma
Hi
Enock
given that (7x-5):(2+4x)=8:7find the value of x
Nandala
3x-12y=18
Kelvin
please why isn't that the 0is in ten thousand place
Grace Reply
please why is it that the 0is in the place of ten thousand
Grace
Send the example to me here and let me see
Stephen
A meditation garden is in the shape of a right triangle, with one leg 7 feet. The length of the hypotenuse is one more than the length of one of the other legs. Find the lengths of the hypotenuse and the other leg
Marry Reply
how far
Abubakar
cool u
Enock
state in which quadrant or on which axis each of the following angles given measure. in standard position would lie 89°
Abegail Reply
hello
BenJay
hi
Method
I am eliacin, I need your help in maths
Rood
how can I help
Sir
hmm can we speak here?
Amoon
however, may I ask you some questions about Algarba?
Amoon
hi
Enock
what the last part of the problem mean?
Roger
The Jones family took a 15 mile canoe ride down the Indian River in three hours. After lunch, the return trip back up the river took five hours. Find the rate, in mph, of the canoe in still water and the rate of the current.
cameron Reply
Shakir works at a computer store. His weekly pay will be either a fixed amount, $925, or $500 plus 12% of his total sales. How much should his total sales be for his variable pay option to exceed the fixed amount of $925.
mahnoor Reply
I'm guessing, but it's somewhere around $4335.00 I think
Lewis
12% of sales will need to exceed 925 - 500, or 425 to exceed fixed amount option. What amount of sales does that equal? 425 ÷ (12÷100) = 3541.67. So the answer is sales greater than 3541.67. Check: Sales = 3542 Commission 12%=425.04 Pay = 500 + 425.04 = 925.04. 925.04 > 925.00
Munster
difference between rational and irrational numbers
Arundhati Reply
When traveling to Great Britain, Bethany exchanged $602 US dollars into £515 British pounds. How many pounds did she receive for each US dollar?
Jakoiya Reply
how to reduced echelon form
Solomon Reply
Jazmine trained for 3 hours on Saturday. She ran 8 miles and then biked 24 miles. Her biking speed is 4 mph faster than her running speed. What is her running speed?
Zack Reply
d=r×t the equation would be 8/r+24/r+4=3 worked out
Sheirtina
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Source:  OpenStax, Economic development for the 21st century. OpenStax CNX. Jun 05, 2015 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11747/1.12
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