A handheld, ultra-portable device that can recognize and immediately report on a wide variety of environmental or may eventually be possible, using a method that incorporates a mixture of biologically tagged onto chips, as per .

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These , tagged with DNA are assembled, and have been exposed to complementary DNA that is tagged with fluorescent dyes. The complementary DNA attached to the showing that the wires assembled in the proper locations.        Credit: Penn State

“Probably one of the most for connecting to the circuit is to place the wires accurately,” says Theresa S. Mayer, professor of and director of Penn State’s Laboratory. “We need to control on the chip with less than a of accuracy”.

Using standard chip manufacturing, each type of nanowire would be placed on the board in a separate operation. Using the researchers’ bottom-up method, they can place three different types of DNA-coated wires where they wanted them, with an of less than 1 percent.

“This approach can be used to simultaneously detect different or diseases based on their nucleic acid signatures,” says Christine D. Keating, of chemistry.

such as can be synthesized from a number of and even coated with previous to assembling them onto a chip,” the scientists note in today’s (Jan. 16) issue of Science They add that positioning the accurately is still difficult using .

Using their assembly method, the scientists can place specific in assigned areas. They begin with a chip with tiny rectangular in the places they wish to place the . They then apply an between that define the area where they want the to assemble. The inject a mixture of the tagged and a liquid over the top of the chip. The are attracted to the area with an electric field and they fall into the proper tiny wells.

“We do not need microfluidic channels to control where each nanowire type goes,” says Mayer. “We can run the solution over the whole chip and its wires will only attach where they are supposed to attach. This is important for scale-up”.

The scientists then move the electric field and position the next tagged . In this proof-of-concept experiment, the different tagged wires were placed in rows, but the scientists say that they could be placed in a variety of configurations.

After all the wires are in place, they can be made into a variety of devices including resonators or field effect transistors that can be used to detect nucleic acid targets.

While the scientists have still not connected each individual device to the underlying circuitry, they did test their chip to ensure that the wires assembled in the proper locations. They immersed the chip in a solution containing DNA sequences complementary to the three virus-specific sequences on the . Because they tagged the complimentary DNA with three differently colored fluorescent dyes, the attached DNA showed that the wires were in the proper places.

The scientists think that their assembly method is extremely flexible, capable of placing a variety of conducting and non-conducting wires with a wide array of coatings.

“The eventual idea would be to extend the method to more nanowire types, such as different DNA sequences or even proteins, and move from fluorescence to real-time electrical detection on the chip,” says Keating.

Source : http://live.psu.edu/

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