Artificial intelligence to explore the biomolecular world

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Underwater view of a metasurface consisting of gold nanorods © Aurélian John-Her
Underwater view of a metasurface consisting of gold nanorods © Aurélian John-Herpin / 2021 EPFL
Underwater view of a metasurface consisting of gold nanorods © Aurélian John-Herpin / 2021 EPFL - Scientists have developed AI-powered nanosensors that let researchers track various kinds of biological molecules without disturbing them. The tiny world of biomolecules is rich in fascinating interactions between a plethora of different agents such as intricate nanomachines (proteins), shape-shifting vessels (lipid complexes), chains of vital information (DNA) and energy fuel (carbohydrates). Yet the ways in which biomolecules meet and interact to define the symphony of life is exceedingly complex. Scientists at the Bionanophotonic Systems Laboratory in EPFL's School of Engineering have now developed a new biosensor that can be used to observe all major biomolecule classes of the nanoworld without disturbing them. Their innovative technique uses nanotechnology, metasurfaces, infrared light and artificial intelligence. The team's research has just been published in  Advanced Materials . To each molecule its own melody In this nano-sized symphony, perfect orchestration makes physiological wonders such as vision and taste possible, while slight dissonances can amplify into horrendous cacophonies leading to pathologies such as cancer and neurodegeneration.  "Tuning into this tiny world and being able to differentiate between proteins, lipids, nucleic acids and carbohydrates without disturbing their interactions is of fundamental importance for understanding life processes and disease mechanisms," says Hatice Altug, the head of the Bionanophotonic Systems Laboratory.
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