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Chapter category: Nanomedicine

Molecular Transport and Sortation

This chapter appears in the following book:

Nanomedicine, Volume I: Basic Capabilities

Edited by: Robert A. Freitas, Jr.
ISBN: 1-57059-680-8
» Get more information about this book at landesbioscience.com «

Chapter authors:
Robert A. Freitas

The human body consists of ~7 x 1027 atoms arranged in a highly aperiodic physical structure. Although 41 chemical elements are commonly found in the body’s construction (Table 3.1), CHON comprises 99% of its atoms. Fully 87% of human body atoms are either hydrogen or oxygen. Somatic atoms are generally present in combined form as molecules or ions, not individual atoms. The molecules of greatest nanomedical interest are incorporated into cells or circulate freely in blood plasma or the interstitial fluid. Table 3.2 summarizes the gross molecular contents of the typical human cell, which is 99.5% water and salts, by molecule count, and contains ~5000 different types of molecules. Appendix B lists 261 of the most common molecular and cellular constituents of human blood, and their normal concentrations in whole blood and plasma. This listing is far from complete. The human body is comprised of ~105 different molecular species, mostly proteins—a large but nonetheless finite molecular parts list. By 1998, at least ~104 of these proteins had been sequenced, ~103 had been spatially mapped, and ~7,000 structures (including proteins, peptides, viruses, protein/nucleic acid complexes, nucleic acids, and carbohydrates) had been registered in the Protein Data Bank which at that time was maintained at Brookhaven National Laboratory.1144 Given the current accelerating pace of improving technology,1145 it is likely that the sequences and 3-D or tertiary structures of all human proteins will have been determined by the second decade of the 21st century. Transporting and sorting such a broad range of essential molecular species will be an important basic capability of many nanomedical systems. The three principal methods for distinguishing and conveying molecules that are most useful in nanomedicine are diffusion transport (Section 3.2), membrane filtration (Section 3.3), and receptor-based transport (Section 3.4). The Chapter ends with a brief discussion of binding site engineering (Section 3.5).

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