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Nanoparticle = Anti-oxidant (Rzigalinski)


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#1 Bruce Klein

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Posted 09 September 2003 - 07:07 AM


Research Spawns Hope for Longer Life
By Barb Abney

A molecular biologist and a nanoscientist at the University of Central Florida have found that nanomaterials developed for industry have an unexpected and potentially revolutionary side effect: They can triple or quadruple the life of brain cells.

The result is people could live longer and with fewer age-related health problems.

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Seal (l) and Rzigalinski.

Beverly Rzigalinski, assistant professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology and at the Biomolecular Sciences Center, and Sudipta Seal, associate engineering professor at the Advanced Materials Processing and Analysis Center and the Department of Mechanical, Materials and Aerospace Engineering, will receive $1.4 million from the National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging to study the reasons behind the reaction and possible future applications.

Rzigalinski has spent the bulk of her career on NIH-funded research from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke studying how brain cells "talk" to each other, most recently focusing on microglia — a specialized cell that responds to brain injury and initiates the response to either repair or destroy the damaged neuron. Seal creates nanostructure materials and recently developed a process for engineering particles on a nanoscale — so they might have more efficient industrial applications.

Because of the current flurry of publicity that anti-oxidants have received for their potential anti-aging properties, Rzigalinski decided to explore introducing the miniaturized particles to the brain cells of rats.

"In culture, rat brain cells usually live about three weeks," Rzigalinski said. "The cells exposed to the engineered nanoparticles lived three to four times longer."

Complete Article
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Tiny tech leads to big grant, NIH interest
Susan Lundine

Orlando Business Journal - The University of Central Florida professor of molecular biology and microbiology's more recent experiments have led to something almost as explosive: Working with Sudipta Seal, associate engineering professor at UCF's Department of Mechanical, Materials and Aerospace Engineering, Rzigalinski has found that nanotechnology originally designed for industry can help brain cells live three to four time longer than normal. The result is a $1.4 million grant from the National Institutes of Health's National Institute on Aging to study possible future applications.

Complete Article

#2 wannabe

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Posted 10 September 2003 - 05:21 AM

5 to 20 years of waiting before it is decided whether humans get to try these, but other health products exploiting the novel properties of nanoscale materials have been marketed for over a decade. Maybe the Rat Brained Robot researchers can accelerate development in the meantime from the new nano-ceramic (clay is "fine particles of hydrous aluminum silicates and other minerals") particles.




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