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From: Hughes, James J. <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 5:12 PM
Subject: [tt] Freitas: Nanotechnology and Radically Extended Life Span
To: [email protected], [email protected]


http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2009/jan2009_Nanotechnology-Radically-Ext
ended-Life-Span_01.htm

LE Magazine January 2009
Reports

Nanotechnology and Radically Extended Life Span

By Robert A. Freitas Jr.

A revolution in medical technology looms large on the horizon. The agent
of change is microscopically small and is defined in today's
nomenclature as nanotechnology.

Nanotechnology is the engineering of molecularly precise structures and,
ultimately, molecular machines. The prefix "nano-" refers to the scale
of these constructions. A nanometer is one-billionth of a meter, the
width of about five carbon atoms nestled side by side. Nanomedicine is
the application of nanotechnology to medicine. The ultimate tool of
nanomedicine is the medical nanorobot-a robot the size of a bacterium,
composed of molecule-size parts somewhat resembling macroscale gears,
bearings, and ratchets. Medical nanorobotics holds the greatest promise
for curing disease and extending health span. With diligent effort, the
first fruits of medical nanorobotics could begin to appear in clinical
treatment as early as the 2020s.

What is a Medical Nanorobot?

Like a regular robot, a nanorobot may be made of many thousands of
mechanical parts such as bearings and gears composed of strong
diamond-like material. A nanorobot will have motors to make things move,
and perhaps manipulator arms or mechanical legs for mobility. It will
have a power supply for energy, sensors to guide its actions, and an
onboard computer to control its behavior. But unlike a regular robot, a
nanorobot will be very small. A nanorobot that would travel through the
bloodstream must be tiny enough to squeeze through even the narrowest
capillaries in the human body. Such machines must be smaller than the
red cells in our blood. A convenient measure of size is the micron, or
one-millionth of a meter. A red cell is about seven microns wide. A
blood-borne medical nanorobot will typically be no larger than two to
three microns in its largest dimension. The parts that make up a
nanorobot will be much smaller still, typically one to ten nanometers in
size. For instance, the planetary gear shown in (Figure 1 below) is a
proposed simple mechanism that converts one kind of rotary motion into
another. It is about four nanometers wide and would comprise about 4,000
atoms arranged in an atomically precise structure.

Future Tools For Fighting Infection

What might a typical medical nanorobot look like? The "microbivore"
shown in (Figure 2 below) would act as an artificial mechanical white
cell, seeking out and digesting unwanted pathogens including bacteria,
viruses, or fungi in the bloodstream. A patient with a bloodborne
infection might be injected with a dose of about 100 billion
microbivores (about 1 cc). When a targeted bacterium bumps into a
microbivore, the microbe sticks to the nanorobot's surface like a fly
caught on flypaper. Telescoping grapples emerge from the microbivore's
hull and transport the pathogen toward the front of the device,
bucket-brigade style, and into the microbivore's "mouth." Once inside,
the microbe is minced and digested into amino acids, mononucleotides,
simple fatty acids and sugars. These basic molecules are then harmlessly
discharged back into the bloodstream through an exhaust port at the rear
of the device. The whole digestion cycle takes only 30 seconds. A
complete treatment might take minutes or hours, far faster than the days
or weeks often needed for antibiotics to work. When the nanorobotic
treatment is finished, the doctor uses an ultrasound signal to tell the
circulating microbivores that their work is done. The nanorobots then
exit the body through the kidneys and are excreted with the urine in due
course. Related nanorobots could be programmed to quickly recognize and
digest even the tiniest aggregates of early cancer cells.

Replacing Worn-Out or Damaged Cells

Medical nanorobots could also be used to perform surgery on individual
cells. In one procedure, a nanorobot called a "chromallocyte" (Figure 3
above), controlled by a physician, would extract all existing
chromosomes from a diseased cell and insert fresh new ones in their
place. This process is called chromosome replacement therapy. The
replacement chromosomes are manufactured earlier, outside of the
patient's body, using a desktop nanofactory that includes a molecular
assembly line. The patient's own individual genome serves as the
blueprint to fabricate the new genetic material. Each chromallocyte is
loaded with a single copy of a digitally corrected chromosome set. After
injection, each device travels to its target tissue cell, enters the
nucleus, replaces old worn-out genes with new chromosome copies, then
exits the cell and is removed from the body. If the patient chooses,
inherited defective genes could be replaced with non-defective base-pair
sequences, permanently curing any genetic disease and even permitting
cancerous cells to be reprogrammed to a healthy state. Perhaps most
importantly, chromosome replacement therapy could correct the
accumulating genetic damage and mutations that lead to aging in every
one of our cells.

Building an Exciting Future

Right now, medical nanorobots are just theory. To actually build them,
we need to create a new technology called molecular manufacturing.
Molecular manufacturing is the production of complex atomically precise
structures using positionally controlled fabrication and assembly of
nanoparts inside a nanofactory. The first experimental proof that
individual atoms could be manipulated was obtained by IBM scientists
back in 1989 when they used a scanning tunneling microscope to precisely
position 35 xenon atoms on a nickel surface to spell out the corporate
logo "IBM" (Figure 4 above). Similarly, inside the nanofactory simple
feedstock molecules such as methane (natural gas), propane, or acetylene
will be manipulated by tiny probe tips to build atomically precise
structures such as the nanoscale gear shown in (Figure 1 above).

Here's how it will work. A nanoscale tool with a chemically reactive tip
is brought into physical contact with a workpiece. The tip mechanically
forces a chemical bond to form at a specific place between existing
atoms on the workpiece and one or more feedstock atoms that are
temporarily bound to the tool. Withdrawing the tool mechanically breaks
the bond between feedstock and tool, leaving the feedstock atoms on the
workpiece, a process called mechanosynthesis (Figure 5 above). The tool
is then recharged with fresh feedstock and is ready to go again. Such a
tool is conceptually similar to the more familiar case of a magnetized
screwdriver that holds a screw. After the screw is rotated into a hole
on a workpiece by turning the screwdriver, withdrawing the screwdriver
leaves the screw in the hole because it is held there more tightly than
its relatively weak magnetic attraction to the screwdriver tip.

With my scientific colleagues, we have done extensive analysis and very
sophisticated quantum chemistry computer simulations (e.g., Figure 5
above) of a large number of potential tooltips and reaction sequences.
We recently published the first description of a complete set of tools
and positionally controlled reactions that should enable us to build
small bits of perfect diamond crystal. Future extensions of these tools
and reactions should let us move on to more complex nanoscale diamondoid
objects such as the nanoscale gear (shown in Figure 1 above). In 2005, I
published the first practical proposal for building a mechanosynthetic
tooltip that was the subject of the first mechanosynthesis patent ever
filed. With a colleague in 2008, I submitted the second mechanosynthesis
patent ever filed, describing additional techniques for building more
tooltips.

Several years ago, Ralph Merkle and I founded the Nanofactory
Collaboration to coordinate a combined experimental and theoretical R&D
program to design and build the first working diamondoid nanofactory.
This long-term effort must start by developing the initial technology of
positionally controlled mechanosynthesis of diamondoid structures using
engineered tooltips and simple molecular feedstock. Our Collaboration
has led to continuing efforts involving direct collaborations among 23
researchers and others, including 17 PhDs or PhD candidates at nine
organizations in four countries - the US, UK, Russia, and Belgium. A
dozen peer-reviewed papers are published or in progress as of 2008.

What You Need to Know: Life Extension and Medical Nanorobotics

* Nanotechnology is the engineering of molecularly precise structures
and, ultimately, molecular machines.

* Nanomedicine is the application of nanotechnology to medicine. The
ultimate tool of nanomedicine is the medical nanorobot-a robot the size
of a bacterium, composed of molecule-size parts.

* Medical nanorobotics holds the greatest promise for curing disease and
extending health span.

* Current developments in nanomedicine will ultimately lead to the
design and manufacture of medical nanorobots for life extension,
possibly by the 2020s.

But now it's time to put our theories to the test. After working closely
for three years with Philip Moriarty, one of the leading scanning probe
microscopists in the UK, our international colleague is now undertaking
direct experiments to build and validate several of our proposed
mechanosynthesis tooltips in his laboratory. We are also preparing a
research program proposal of our own to solicit additional funding from
various US public or private sources to support further
mechanosynthesis-related experimental and theory work on a greatly
accelerated schedule. We expect these efforts will ultimately lead to
the design and manufacture of medical nanorobots for life extension,
possibly during the 2020s.

We are grateful to the Life Extension Foundation for contributing monies
to help fund our research during the embryonic stages of this project's
development. (c) 2008 Robert A. Freitas, Jr. All Rights Reserved.

If you have any questions on the scientific content of this article,
please call a Life Extension Health Advisor at 1-800-226-2370.

Useful Websites

  1. Personal website of Robert Freitas: http://www.rfreitas.com.
  2. Nanomedicine website: http://www.nanomedicine.com.
  3. Nanofactory Collaboration website:
http://www.MolecularAssembler.com/Nanofactory<http://www.molecularassembler.com/Nanofactory>
.
  4. Nanomedicine Art Gallery:
http://www.foresight.org/Nanomedicine/Gallery/index.html.
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