Scientists use frog cells to give artificial nose super smelling skills
By ANITuesday, August 24, 2010
LONDON - A scientist has revealed that with genetically modified frog cells artificial nose of robot can smell more accurately than the electronic noses.
That’s because e-noses use quartz rods designed to vibrate at a different frequency when they bind to a target substance. But this is not a foolproof system, as subtly different substances with similar molecular weights may bind to the rod, producing a false positive.
Instead, Shoji Takeuchi, a bioengineer at the University of Tokyo in Japan, believes there is nothing quite as good as biology for distinguishing between different biomolecules, such as disease markers in our breath. So he and his team have developed a living smell sensor that could distinguish between many nearly identical biomolecules.
As a proof of concept, Takeuchi has built a robot that shakes its head when moth pheromones are sensed by the nose.
He now wants to extend the frog-based technology. “The X. laevis oocyte has high versatility for the development of chemical sensors for various odorants,” he says.
“We believe that a shared ability to smell might open a new relationship between man and robot.”
The study has been published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)