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Nanobiotechnology: Biological Applications of Nanofabrication
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2020
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Nanobiotechnology is the fusion of biology and nanofabrication (Hoch, et al. 1996). Nanofabricated devices are increasingly being used in biological studies, and surface modification methods are important for interfacing inorganic devices with tissues.
Nanofabricated implants are used to study brain physiology (Najafi and Wise, 1986). These implants can have cross-sectional dimensions as small as 15 μm. However, the implants cause glial scars that inhibit their operation. Figure 1 shows a model implant, with a trapezoidal cross section (base=200 μm, height=130 μm, top=60 μm, length=2 mm), for studying scar formation. Implants were inserted into the brains of rats and tissue was harvested after 1 hr. to 12 wks. Figure 2 shows a thick (100 μm) section of brain prepared 7 days after implantation; the section was immunolabeled for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and imaged in a Bio-Rad confocal microscope. The implantation site is surrounded by GFAP positive material indicative of reactive astrocytes.
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- Miniaturized Artificial Machines in Biology
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- Copyright © Microscopy Society of America