Friday, August 25, 2023

Tiny magnetic beads produce an optical signal that could be used to quickly detect pathogens

The findings point to faster way to detect bacteria in food, water, and clinical samples.




Getting results from a blood test can take anywhere from one day to a week, depending on what a test is targeting. The same goes for tests of water pollution and food contamination. And in most cases, the wait time has to do with time-consuming steps in sample processing and analysis.

Now, MIT engineers have identified a new optical signature in a widely used class of magnetic beads, which could be used to quickly detect contaminants in a variety of diagnostic tests. For example, the team showed the signature could be used to detect signs of the food contaminant Salmonella.

The so-called Dynabeads are microscopic magnetic beads that can be coated with antibodies that bind to target molecules, such as a specific pathogen. Dynabeads are typically used in experiments in which they are mixed into solutions to capture molecules of interest. But from there, scientists have to take additional, time-consuming steps to confirm that the molecules are indeed present and bound to the beads.


The MIT team found a faster way to confirm the presence of Dynabead-bound pathogens, using optics, specifically, Raman spectroscopy. This optical technique identifies specific molecules based on their “Raman signature,” or the unique way in which a molecule scatters light.


The researchers found that Dynabeads have an unusually strong Raman signature that can be easily detected, much like a fluorescent tag. This signature, they found, can act as a “reporter.” If detected, the signal can serve as a quick confirmation, within less than one second, that a target pathogen is indeed present in a given sample. The team is currently working to develop a portable device for quickly detecting a range of bacterial pathogens, and their results will appear in an Emerging Investigators special issue of the Journal of Raman Spectroscopy.


“This technique would be useful in a situation where a doctor is trying to narrow down the source of an infection in order to better inform antibiotic prescription, as well as for the detection of known pathogens in food and water,” says study co-author Marissa McDonald, a graduate student in the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology. “Additionally, we hope this approach will eventually lead to expanded access to advanced diagnostics in resource-limited environments.”


Study co-authors at MIT include Postdoctoral Associate Jongwan Lee; Visiting Scholar Nikiwe Mhlanga; Research Scientist Jeon Woong Kang; Tata Professor Rohit Karnik, who is also the associate director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab; and Assistant Professor Loza Tadesse of the Department of Mechanical Engineering.


Oil and water

Looking for diseased cells and pathogens in fluid samples is an exercise in patience.

“It’s kind of a needle-in-a-haystack problem,” Tadesse says.

The numbers present are so small that they must be grown in controlled environments to sufficient numbers, and their cultures stained, then studied under a microscope. The entire process can take several days to a week to yield a confident positive or negative result.

Both Karnik and Tadesse’s labs have independently been developing techniques to speed up various parts of the pathogen testing process and make the process portable, using Dynabeads.


Dynabeads are commercially available microscopic beads made from a magnetic iron core and a polymer shell that can be coated with antibodies. The surface antibodies act as hooks to bind specific target molecules. When mixed with a fluid, such as a vial of blood or water, any molecules present will glom onto the Dynabeads. Using a magnet, scientists can gently coax the beads to the bottom of a vial and filter them out of a solution. Karnik’s lab is investigating ways to then further separate the beads into those that are bound to a target molecule, and those that are not. “Still, the challenge is, how do we know that we have what we’re looking for?” Tadesse says.

The beads themselves are not visible by eye. That’s where Tadesse’s work comes in. Her lab uses Raman spectroscopy as a way to “fingerprint” pathogens. She has found that different cell types scatter light in unique ways that can be used as a signature to identify them.

In the team’s new work, she and her colleagues found that Dynabeads also have a unique and strong Raman signature that can act as a surprisingly clear beacon.


“We were initially seeking to identify the signatures of bacteria, but the signature of the Dynabeads was actually very strong,” Tadesse says. “We realized this signal could be a means of reporting to you whether you have that bacteria or not.”


Testing beacon

As a practical demonstration, the researchers mixed Dynabeads into vials of water contaminated with Salmonella. They then magnetically isolated these beads onto microscope slides and measured the way light scattered through the fluid when exposed to laser light. Within half a second, they quickly detected the Dynabeads’ Raman signature — a confirmation that bound Dynabeads, and by inference, Salmonella, were present in the fluid.

“This is something that can be used to rapidly give a positive or negative answer: Is there a contaminant or not?” Tadesse says. “Because even a handful of pathogens can cause clinical symptoms.”

The team’s new technique is significantly faster than conventional methods and uses elements that could be adapted into smaller, more portable forms — a goal that the researchers are currently working toward. The approach is also highly versatile.


“Salmonella is the proof of concept,” Tadesse says. “You could purchase Dynabeads with E.coli antibodies, and the same thing would happen: It would bind to the bacteria, and we’d be able to detect the Dynabead signature because the signal is super strong.”

The team is particularly keen to apply the test to conditions such as sepsis, where time is of the essence, and where pathogens that trigger the condition are not rapidly detected using conventional lab tests.


“There are a lot cases, like in sepsis, where pathogenic cells cannot always be grown on a plate,” says Lee, a member of Karnik’s lab. “In that case, our technique could rapidly detect these pathogens.”

This research was supported, in part, by the MIT Laser Biomedical Research Center, the National Cancer Institute, and the Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab at MIT.


Source:MIT News

Thursday, August 24, 2023

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff-Nobel Prize 1901

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:

Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff-Nobel Prize 1901




Stereochemistry

Methane was known to consist of four atoms of hydrogen and one of carbon. It had also been determined that it was a symmetrical compound, meaning that in chemical reactions, other chemicals did not discriminate as to which hydrogen atom they would react to. Van 't Hoff quickly concluded that the only spatial arrangement consistent with this finding was one where the carbon atom lay at the center of a regular tetrahedron (a four-sided figure with equilateral triangles as sides) with each of the other four molecules at a corner of the tetrahedron. This was the first peek that scientists had ventured to take into the three-dimensional structure of molecules.


Van 't Hoff claimed as the inspiration for his discovery, Johannes Wislicenus's studies on lactic acid, in which he declares that differences in some chemical properties may be attributable to structural differences in their molecules. On the other hand, Joseph Achille Le Bel, who, incidentally, had studied with van 't Hoff under Kekule, and who published a similar conclusion to van 't Hoff, claimed Louis Pasteur as his inspiration.


Optically active compounds

One property chemists had trouble explaining was the optical activity of different substances in solution. A beam of light is said to be polarized when, according to the wave theory of light, all the waves are in the same plane. Jean-Baptiste Biot had established in the early nineteenth century that when a beam of polarized light passes through the solutions of some organic compounds, the plane of polarization of the light is rotated, sometimes to the right, sometimes to the left. He postulated that this could be due to the lack of symmetry in the structure of the molecules, meaning that the molecules must have a left-hand and right-hand side that are distinguishable from one another. Louis Pasteur surveyed a large number of substances that exhibit this property, and found that they all consisted of a carbon atom surrounded by atoms of more than one element. Van 't Hoff showed how his stereochemical model of carbon compounds could account for this property.


Van 't Hoff was the first chemist to peer into the three-dimensional structure of molecules. The techniques that led to the discovery of the three-dimensional structure of proteins and to deciphering the winding staircase-like structure of the DNA molecule can be traced to his work more than half a century earlier.

Van 't Hoff's exploration of the factors that drive the speed of chemical reactions were of major importance to the chemical industry, and to the establishment of the field of physical chemistry.

Upon studying the lives of famous scientists, van 't Hoff concluded that imagination plays an all-important role in the ability of a researcher to make new discoveries.


Source:newworldencyclopedia

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#chemistry #3dstructure #discovery #nobelprize


Career Opportunities in USA

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Best regards

Muthuramalingam Krishnan


Opportunities in United States

Dear Members, 
If you are looking for a new position in the United States,here are my personal recommendations to those who reside in the USA. 

This portal is offering many roles from Junior to senior levels.You can stumble upon it to find a relevant position that suits your profile. 

Pls visit the link:https://urbanlocalcmp.page.link/kEnz1gQdAmyySqrY8

Wiltshire Explorer Attempts First Atlantic Crossing in Open-basket Hydrogen Balloon

Wiltshire explorer attempts first Atlantic crossing in open-basket #hydrogen balloon.

A thrill-seeker from Wiltshire is among the three pilots aiming to be the first to brave the elements and cross the Atlantic Ocean in an open-basket hydrogen #gas balloon next month. The crew, with a combined age of 200, consists of the Wiltshire resident and explorer Sir David Hempleman-Adams, 66, along with American balloon manufacturer Bert Padelt, 62, and Swiss scientist and entrepreneur Dr Frederik Paulsen, 72.



If successful in navigating the unique hydrogen balloon across the pond, they will be the oldest people to cross the Atlantic in an open basket gas balloon. Their route will take them from Maine in the US, over Newfoundland in Canada, across the Atlantic Ocean, and then over Ireland and Scottish waters before they land in Europe.


A thrill-seeker from Wiltshire is among the three pilots aiming to be the first to brave the elements and cross the Atlantic Ocean in an open-basket hydrogen gas balloon next month. The crew, with a combined age of 200, consists of the Wiltshire resident and explorer Sir David Hempleman-Adams, 66, along with American balloon manufacturer Bert Padelt, 62, and Swiss scientist and entrepreneur Dr Frederik Paulsen, 72.


If successful in navigating the unique hydrogen balloon across the pond, they will be the oldest people to cross the Atlantic in an open basket gas balloon. Their route will take them from Maine in the US, over Newfoundland in Canada, across the Atlantic Ocean, and then over Ireland and Scottish waters before they land in Europe.

Sir David will also become the only person to have flown across the Atlantic three times in an open basket balloon, having first achieved the feat in 2003 and completing it again in 2007. The adventurer described how he and his crew are becoming “more adventurous with age”.


During the crossing, the team will be collecting air samples as part of a scientific study supported by Basecamp Research.

It is hoped this will uncover new #microbes that could lead to the discovery of new natural proteins which could be used to develop new products such as medicines, biofuels or bioplastics.


Sir David added: “A balloon is the perfect platform to investigate a location where the biome has never been sampled and the scientists we’ve partnered with are extremely excited about what we might find and what they will be able to learn from our adventures.”


A secondary scientific study, to measure the impact of the Canadian forest fires, will also be undertaken during the challenge in collaboration with the Institute for Climate and #Atmospheric Science at the University of Leeds.

The team will be able to collect samples at between 6,000 to 8,000 feet, weather permitting, from a mid-Atlantic location at an altitude that has not been sampled before.


Source:Hydrogen-Central

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Wednesday, August 23, 2023

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share: Shrinkage

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:

Shrinkage is sometimes explained simply in terms of CTE (coeff. of thermal expansion). The plastics cool down from melt to room T, hence... it shrinks.


In the Injection Molding process however we take advantage of melt compressibility and fairly high pressure (the packing) to compensate for the natural shrinkage of the material.


The result is that, although you can't change the coefficient of thermal expansion with your process, you ABSOLUTELY can change the final shrinkage of your part, almost at will !


Source:Vito Leo

Visit MY BLOG http://polymerguru.blogspot.com


#plastics #polymerindustry #injectionmolding #shrinkage #expansion

INEOS Styrolution Launches New ASA Grade for Healthcare Industry

 INEOS Styrolution announced the introduction of a new ASA “MED” material dedicated to applications in the #healthcare industry. It was designed specifically having small #medicaldevice housings and casings in mind.


Excellent Mechanical Properties:

The new Luran® S MED 797S SPF30 is a member of INEOS #Styrolution’s #asa product family Luran® S. Luran® S excels with strong property performance such as chemical resistance, #UV resistance, and impact strength. Suitable for #injectionmolding applications, Luran® S offers excellent flowability for easy processing.


Luran® S MED 797S SPF30, available in NR (Natur) and in white (WT000112), builds on these strengths. The product shows excellent chemical resistance against alcohols (e.g., IPA, ethanol, propanol) or alcohol-based disinfectants. It also shows good resistance against #quaternary ammonium or glutaral based #disinfectants making it a material of choice for clinical environments.


High impact strength specifically at room temperature and at lower temperatures (5°C) contribute to a better protection of devices, e.g., avoiding cracking failures when a device drops to the floor. This particular performance trait makes Luran® S MED 797S SPF30 a compelling alternative to standard ABS materials.


The new Luran® S grade is also available using #renewablefeedstock, based on a mass balance process certified under ISCC PLUS. Luran® S ECO MED 797S SPF30 BC40 contains 40% renewable content resulting in a carbon footprint reduction of up to 52% compared to fossil based Luran® S.


Bernd Elbert, market development manager at #INEOS Styrolution says, “The market segment of small, mobile medical and hospital devices is growing rapidly. The properties of our new Luran® S MED 797S SPF30 make it a very strong contender for device housings and casings in this specific category. I invite every application designer to explore our new product for their next project.”


Source: INEOS Styrolution/Omnexus-spcialchem

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Faerch advances circular packaging leadership with growing rPET volumes from Cirrec

As many recyclers across Europe face significant market pressures and operational challenges, Faerch’s integrated recycling facility, Cirrec...