A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin

About a hundred years ago, chemist and biologist Paul Ehrlich introduced the concept of the "magic bullet". So he denoted his dream - a drug that when injected into the body of the patient itself will find and kill the pathogen of the disease, without causing damage to the patient. He...

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Main Author: Alyautdin, Renad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Teknologi MARA Cawangan Selangor 2018
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Online Access:http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/44040/1/44040.pdf
http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/44040/
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spelling my.uitm.ir.440402021-03-23T07:28:57Z http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/44040/ A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin Alyautdin, Renad Biomedical engineering Nanotechnology About a hundred years ago, chemist and biologist Paul Ehrlich introduced the concept of the "magic bullet". So he denoted his dream - a drug that when injected into the body of the patient itself will find and kill the pathogen of the disease, without causing damage to the patient. He suggested that it is possible to find a molecule that would affect a given biological object, for example, kill pathogenic microbes or cancer cells, but did not affect the human body. Such hypothetical molecules he called then "magic bullets". In the mid-sixties, the English scientist Alec Douglas Bangham, assessing the role of phospholipids in blood coagulation, studied the structure of dispersions formed by the swelling of phospholipids under condition of water excess. On electron micrographs he saw layered particles, similar to the membrane structures of a cell. The following study showed that the substances present in the solution at the time of swelling of the phospholipids are incorporated inside these particles and are retained there for a long time, exchanging with the outer solution at a very low rate. So for the first time it was established that phospholipids, which are the main components of cell membranes, are able spontaneously to form closed shells in water . Universiti Teknologi MARA Cawangan Selangor 2018-06-30 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/44040/1/44040.pdf Alyautdin, Renad (2018) A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin. Journal of Clinical and Health Sciences, 3 (1). pp. 13-15. ISSN 0127 – 984X https://jchs-medicine.uitm.edu.my/index.php
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic Biomedical engineering
Nanotechnology
spellingShingle Biomedical engineering
Nanotechnology
Alyautdin, Renad
A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin
description About a hundred years ago, chemist and biologist Paul Ehrlich introduced the concept of the "magic bullet". So he denoted his dream - a drug that when injected into the body of the patient itself will find and kill the pathogen of the disease, without causing damage to the patient. He suggested that it is possible to find a molecule that would affect a given biological object, for example, kill pathogenic microbes or cancer cells, but did not affect the human body. Such hypothetical molecules he called then "magic bullets". In the mid-sixties, the English scientist Alec Douglas Bangham, assessing the role of phospholipids in blood coagulation, studied the structure of dispersions formed by the swelling of phospholipids under condition of water excess. On electron micrographs he saw layered particles, similar to the membrane structures of a cell. The following study showed that the substances present in the solution at the time of swelling of the phospholipids are incorporated inside these particles and are retained there for a long time, exchanging with the outer solution at a very low rate. So for the first time it was established that phospholipids, which are the main components of cell membranes, are able spontaneously to form closed shells in water .
format Article
author Alyautdin, Renad
author_facet Alyautdin, Renad
author_sort Alyautdin, Renad
title A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin
title_short A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin
title_full A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin
title_fullStr A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin
title_full_unstemmed A Brief History of Progress on Nanotechnology: When Will the ‘Magic’ Nanobullet Shoot? / Renad Alyautdin
title_sort brief history of progress on nanotechnology: when will the ‘magic’ nanobullet shoot? / renad alyautdin
publisher Universiti Teknologi MARA Cawangan Selangor
publishDate 2018
url http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/44040/1/44040.pdf
http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/44040/
https://jchs-medicine.uitm.edu.my/index.php
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score 13.15806