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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Wu X, Liu H, Liu J, Haley KN, Treadway JA, Larson JP, Ge N, Peale F, Bruchez MP. Immunofluorescent labeling of cancer marker Her2 and other cellular targets with semiconductor quantum dots. Nat Biotechnol. 2003 Jan;21(1):41-6. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Join the Quantum Dots—for Brighter, Longer, and Multiplex Cell Images

Comment by:  Sanford Simon
Submitted 2 December 2002  |  Permalink Posted 2 December 2002

Biology is at a wonderfully exciting, but vexing point. We have the sequences for all of the human genes. However, the business end of the body occurs [is run by] the products of the genes. Often, to understand how things are functioning, or what happens when they do not function properly, we need to be able to follow these gene products. Many diseases are diseases in trafficking of proteins, i.e., the protein is properly made but goes to the wrong place in a cell, where it may serve another function or may be processed abnormally. Often, it is even more important to know where a protein is being made, where it is going in response to a stimulus, where is it not going, than to know how much protein is being made. For the past 20 years, my lab has focused on such issues as protein targeting and transport. A nice summary of work on protein targeting and transport appears in Gunter Blobel's Nobel Address at the Nobel Web site.

To study the movement of a protein we need to study it in a living cell....  Read more


  Primary News: Join the Quantum Dots—for Brighter, Longer, and Multiplex Cell Images

Comment by:  Xingyong Wu
Submitted 3 December 2002  |  Permalink Posted 3 December 2002

It was demonstrated a few years ago that QDs had the potential to become a new and better class of fluorescent labels with advantages over conventional organic dyes. However, since some key technical problems remained to be solved, these advantages were not fully demonstrated in real applications, and QDs were not available for scientists who didn't have a chemistry lab to make QDs.

Recently we have made a breakthrough in generating QD conjugates. In the article, we demonstrated the advantages of QDs (high intensity, photostability, multiplex flexibility) in real applications with specimens ranging from fixed tissue sections to live cells. In addition, we reported the first true multiplexed detection of specific cellular targets with QDs conjugated to streptavidin and IgGs. Our new quantum dot technology allows us to generate QDs at a commercial scale and sell QD conjugates (see www.qdots.com for products information). QD-based probes will have applications in immunocytochemistry, pathological diagnosis, live cell imaging, and multiple target analysis in many biological and...  Read more

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