Signal Discovery?
A Los Angeles scientist says living cells may make distinct sounds, which might someday help doctors "hear" diseases
- By Mark Wheeler
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Gimzewski acknowledges more work needs to be done. Meanwhile, the findings have caught the attention of his UCLA colleague Michael Teitell, a pathologist specializing in cancers of the lymphocyte, a type of white blood cell. He's subjecting human and mouse muscle cells and bone cells to drugs and chemicals to induce genetic and physical changes; Gimzewski will then try to "listen" to the altered cells and distinguish them by their sounds.
Teitell says the thought of detecting cancer at its earliest cellular stages is exciting, but whether the technology will work as a diagnostic tool remains to be seen (or heard). He doesn't want to oversell the idea: "It could turn out that all these signals will be such a mishmash that we won't be able to clearly identify one from the other."
Gimzewski hopes the work will have a practical application, but he's thrilled as much by the hunt as the catch. "Whatever the outcome," he says, "I'm primarily driven by curiosity and excitement at the phenomenon of cellular motion—what inspired nature to create such a mechanism and to really understand in depth what these beautiful sounds mean." The mere possibility that he's discovered a new characteristic of cells, with all the intriguing questions that raises, is, he says, "already more than enough of a gift."
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Comments (1)
Fascinating! My point in making a comment here is I am wondering if Prof. Gimzewski has ever read anything regarding Cleve Backster, the polygraph man?
Cleve has worked his way into interactions/communications with single-cells, as he did in the 60s and 70s with whole plants.
I see parallels in each of their works. Maybe there may be some science here to exchange and further the research of one or both.
I'm going to send this article over to Cleve and hope maybe someone mentions Mr. Backster to Mr. Gimzewski.
Posted by Joseph Howard on September 17,2009 | 10:42 AM