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XPS and Biomedical Science |
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Written by Alan
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Wednesday, 14 December 2011 09:11 |
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X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy at the Forefront of Biomedical Science
Shimadzu has published the international corporate magazine, "A Collection from nature and SHIMADZU", in partnership with Nature, the world-renowned science magazine. Of interest to Kratos AXIS users will be the 2 page feature on the application of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy at the forefront of Biomedical Science. This article introduces the cutting edge research of Prof. Hans Griesser of the University of South Australia and the University of Washington's Prof. David Castner.
Prof. Hans Griesser is training XPS on the problem of microbial infections. Bacteria often attach to the surfaces of implanted medical devices and form a film against which antibiotics and the immune response are ineffective. He correlates XPS data about the top 10 nanometres of the material with the observed biological response. "XPS gives us confidence about how many bioactive molecules are on a surface and how they are reacting" he says. Antibacterial coatings in the US alone will be worth an estimated US$250 million in 2012, and Griesser is now gearing up for pre-clinical trials.
For Prof. David Castner the ultimate question is how biomolecules, such as those used to make vascular grafts and hip implants, and biomolecules interact. "We want to make a surface that the body looks at and says, ''oh, I can interact normally with that." The task is even more more challenging because ideally the device's surface chemistry should change during the healing process. The most exciting application during his 4 years use of the instrument has been the effort to improve DNA microarrays. These small chips with thousands of DNA microspots can reveal, for example, how genes are expressed. Until now, microarrays have been qualitative - "if something lights up more, there's probably more gene expression", he explains. Castner is using XPS for "label free" DNA detection, which would avoid tagging and offer precise quantitative data about reaction levels.
The full article can be down loaded from the Shimadzu web site. As the the article concludes, ''the number of new materials with promising application is rising dramatically - so is the demand for detailed biochemical information about them." "XPS citations in the scientific literature are increasing at a rapid rate", says Castner. "Both XPS and the Kratos AXIS Ultra DLD look to have bright futures''. We think so too!
There are more articles available from these links... 
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 14 December 2011 15:48 |