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CEA/CNRS Joint Press Release
Teams of chemists from the CEA1 and the CNRS2
recently developed a simple and efficient procedure for making functional
carbon nanotubes. This achievement offers prospects for interesting applications
in the field of nanobiotechnology, such as the utilization of these molecular
structures for the transport of water-insoluble molecules (for example,
certain drugs), their use as biosensors, etc. These findings appear in
the May 2, 2003 issue of the journal Science.
Carbon nanotubes are carbon cylinders made up
of one or more rolled-up graphene sheets, closed off at either end by
half-spheres in the shape of a soccer ball. The length of these one-dimensional
molecules is around 1 µm (one millionth of a meter) and their diameter
varies from one to several nanometers (millionths of millimeter), depending
on the number of tubes rolled up together. These carbon nanotubes possess
excellent mechanical, structural, and electrical properties, which make
these materials valuable for a number of nanotechnology applications,
in particular in the field of nanobiotechnology.
Carbon nanotubes are insoluble in organic solvents and water, which today
considerably limits the scope of their utilization. Nonetheless, when
carbon nanotubes are mixed and agitated with a detergent, they disperse
to create a stable suspension. The teams of CEA and CNRS chemists used
electron microscopy to analyze the molecular organization that enables
these nanotubes to become soluble in the presence of detergents: the molecules
of detergent aggregate at the surface of the nanotubes and arrange themselves
in the shape of rings and helices. The stability of such assemblies is,
however, limited.
In order to determine whether other lipid molecules could adsorb and self-organize
on carbon nanotubes, creating more stable assemblies, the researchers
designed and synthesized new reagents, which form lipidic "rings"
made up of supramolecular half-cylinders (see diagram below). Their stability
depends on the length and number of the carbon chains of the lipid reagents
of which they are composed. These rings also make it possible to fix proteins
onto the surface of the nanotubes.
Creating such stable organic assemblies offers a simple and efficient
method to make nanotubes functional using chemical reagents. The supramolecular
structure that is thereby obtained may lead to a number of applications
in the field of nanobiotechnology: it could be used for the development
of molecular sensors (biosensors) for detecting the body's molecules.
This structure could also make it possible to create new vectors of hydrophobic
components, in particular complex drugs.
Reference: Supramolecular self-assembly
of lipid derivatives on carbon nanotubes - Cyrille Richard, Fabrice Balavoine,
Patrick Schultz, Thomas W. Ebbesen, Charles Mioskowski Science,
May 2, 2003.
1 - "Service de marquage moléculaire
et de chimie bioorganique," Department of molecular labeling and
bioorganic chemistry, CEA/Saclay.
2 - "Laboratoire de chimie bioorganique," Laboratory of bioorganic
chemistry, CNRS Université de Strasbourg 1.
CNRS press contact:
Muriel Ilous: +33 1 44 96 43 09
e-mail: muriel.ilous@cnrs-dir.fr
CEA press contact:
Pascal Newton: +33 1 40 56 20 97
e-mail: pascal.newton@cea.fr
CNRS/CEA researcher contacts:
Charles Mioskowski: +33 3 90 24 42 97 or +33
1 69 08 24 98
E-mail: mioskow@aspirine.u-strasbg.fr
or charles.mioskowski@cea.fr
Cyrille Richard: +33 1 55 71 39 03
CNRS Department of chemical sciences contact:
Laurence Mordenti: +33 1 44 96 41 09
e-mail: laurence.mordenti@cnrs-dir.fr
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