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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: bob kuska + 301) 594-7560 + contact  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/5/2008)

[PDF] New Aim-and-Shoot Technique Speeds Up Cell Analysis -
B Kuska - jnci, 1996 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
Researchers at the National Institutes of Health reported recently that they
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[PDF] Cancer Genome Anatomy Project Set for Take-off -
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Outside the National Archives in Washington, DC, a large stone statue stares
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Sit, DNA, Sit: Cancer Genetics Going to the Dogs -
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But, unlike so much of the research conducted on animals, the dog also stands to
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Already, an initial wave of molecular genetic studies in the dog have led ...

SV40 Bugaboo: Spinning the News -
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What was going on, a reporter later told her, was that a story from London had
reached the United States and touted Butel's "new findings" linking the original
polio vaccines, known for decades to have been contaminated with SV40, to ...

As Easy as ABC: Scientists Fish Out Another Drug Resistance Gene -
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For years, most scientists thought they had an open-and-shut-case to explain why
human tumors often grow resistant to chemotherapy. They had assembled a
formidable body of laboratory and clinical evidence that all seemed to ...

[PDF] BRCA1 Discovery Aftermath: No Rush for Genetic Testing -
B Kuska - jnci, 1995 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
When researchers announced that one out of every 100 Jews of European descent
might be genetically predis- posed to breast and ovarian cancer, Rabbi Matthew
H. Simon stared into the TV cameras and answered the ques- tions weighing ...

Beer, Bethesda, and biology: how" genomics" came into being -
B Kuska - J Natl Cancer I, 1998 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
Roderick: In 1986, I attended a good-sized international meeting in Bethesda to
discuss the feasibility of mapping the entire human genome. The meeting had
adjourned for the day, and Frank Ruddle, Ph.D. [Yale University], and ...

First Responses Seen in Cancer Patients To a Recombinant Immunotoxin -
B Kuska - jnci, 1999 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
That is, until now. In the November 15 issue of the journal Blood, a team of
scientists from the National Cancer Institute reports that four out of four
patients with hairy cell leukemia, an uncommon cancer of immune B cells, ...

Racial Gaps in Cancer Survival-Asking the Wrong Questions? -
B Kuska - jnci, 1999 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
A landmark 1973 study showed for the first time an "alarming increase" in the
number of American blacks dying from cancer. Today, nearly 30 years later,
experts say the alarm bells continue to sound unabated.

[BOOK] Hot Potato: How Washington and New York Gave Birth to Black Basketball and Changed America's Game …
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Renaissance became one of the sport's top draws in white and black America
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Source: Google Scholar

Contact: Bob Kuska
kuskar@nidcr.nih.gov
301-594-7560
NIH/National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

Nature's secrets yield new adhesive material

Scientists report they have merged two of nature’s most elegant strategies for wet and dry adhesion to produce a synthetic material that one day could lead to more durable and longer-lasting bandages, patches, and surgical materials. As published in this week’s issue of the journal Nature, the scientists, supported by the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR), part of the National Institutes of Health, have designed a synthetic material that starts with the dry adhesive properties of the gecko lizard and supplements it with the underwater adhesive properties of a mussel. The hybrid material, which they call a geckel nanoadhesive, proved in initial testing to be adherent under dry and wet conditions. It also adhered much longer under both extremes than previous gecko-based synthetic adhesives, a major issue in this area of research.

According to the authors, their findings mark the first time that two polar opposite adhesion strategies in nature have been merged into a man-made reversible adhesive. “Our work represents a proof of principle that it can be done,” said Phillip Messersmith, D. D.S., Ph.D., a scientist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. and the senior author on the paper. “A great deal of research still must be done to refine the fabrication process and greatly reduce its cost. There’s no reason to believe that these improvements can’t be achieved, but it’s going to take time.”

Dr. Messersmith said the inspiration for the geckel nanoadhesive came about two years ago when he noticed an article about the adhesive force of a single hair from the foot of gecko. As lizard fans have long marveled, geckos climb walls and other dry, steep surfaces not by producing a glue-like substance but through a natural adaptation of the hairs that cover the soles of their feet.

Roughly one-tenth the thickness of a human hair, each gecko hair splits multiple times at the end. These split ends contain cup-like structures called spatulae that vastly increase the hair’s surface area. Whereas a human hair touches a surface just once, the gecko makes multiple contacts with the suction-like spatulae. With roughly a half million hairs on each foot, scientists estimate a gecko has a billion spatulae at work as it scampers up a wall.

Messersmith knew that researchers have attempted for several years to produce synthetic adhesives based on the adherence strategy of the gecko. What caught his eye in this article is gecko adhesion doesn’t work well in water. Messersmith, who studies the underwater adhesion of mussels, had an idea. What if each synthetic gecko-inspired polymer, called a pillar, was coated with a man-made adhesive protein inspired by the mussel" As Messersmith mused, nobody had ever tried it and, if successful, this hybrid approach might spawn a new and potentially superior direction in designing temporary adhesive materials.

As reported in Nature, Messersmith’s idea turned out to be correct. He and his colleagues designed a small nanopolymer array that mimicked the natural spatial patterns of the hair on the foot of a gecko. They then coated their creation with a thin layer of a synthetic compound. This unusual compound mimics the reversible bonding action of a mussel adhesive protein that Messersmith’s group has studied for the past several years.

In their initial experiments, which were led by graduate student Haeshin Lee, they found that the wet adhesive force of each pillar increased nearly 15 times when coated with the mussel mimetic and applied to titanium oxide, gold, and other surfaces. The dry adhesive force of the pillars also improved when coated with the compound.

“That actually wasn’t so surprising to us,” said Lee, the lead author on the study. “The mussel-inspired adhesive is extremely versatile in that it can bond reversibly to inorganic surfaces under wet and dry conditions.”

As Lee noted, the next research hurdle was whether their hybrid geckel nanoadhesive would continue to stick to surfaces after multiple contacts. This has been a major challenge with other gecko-based adhesives. They typically stick well at first but lose their ability to adhere after a few cycles of contact with a tipless cantilever.

Using the cantilever and repeatedly touching it down, Lee developed a camera to visualize the process down to individual pillars. He found that the geckel hybrid maintained 85 percent of its adherence under wet conditions after 1,100 contacts with the tip. Under dry conditions, the level of adherence was 98 percent.

“This isn’t quite a home run, but it’s somewhere in between a double and a triple,” said Lee, who devised on his own a special imaging devise to visualize individual pillars during the experiments.

Messersmith said that while the results are extremely promising, his group still must tackle several practical problems before it can scale up its research. “Any time that you fabricate an array of nano pillars of this type over large areas, you must have a very effective way of doing it without losing the efficacy of the approach,” said Messersmith. “We’ll also need to reduce the fabrication costs to make geckel commercially viable.”

But Messersmith said he envisions great possibilities for geckel. “Band aids already adhere well, except if you go swimming, take a shower, or somehow expose it to a lot of water,” said Messersmith. “So I think the most important thing with this adhesive is the added value of resisting immersion in water.”

“I should add that the essential component of the wet adhesive polymer on the pillars contains a chemical that we have discovered last year adheres well to mucosal surfaces, such as those inside our mouth,” he noted. “It may be possible to develop patches in the future that can be applied on the inside of the cheek to cover damaged tissue.”

###

The National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research is the Nation’s leading funder of research on oral, dental, and craniofacial health.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) — The Nation's Medical Research Agency — includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.

 
 
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