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18 February 2010 - Laser pioneers and Nobel Laureates honored at LaserFest event

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29 January 2010 - Engineers develop cancer-targeting nanoprobe sensors

27 January 2010 - Novel fluorescent probe for optical imaging and measurement of synaptic activity in the brain

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22 January 2010 - Visual Optics Research - Optical acceleration cancellation

20 January 2010 - OSA to Launch New Journal: Biomedical Optics Express

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13 January 2010 - OFC/NFOEC 2010 to be Dedicated to Nobel Prize Winner and Industry Pioneer Charles Kao

06 January 2010 - Neuroengineers silence brain cells with multiple colours of light

Healing Wounds with Lasers

Research News from CLEO/IQEC Meeting in Baltimore, May 31 to June 5

WASHINGTON, May 26--Researchers from around the world will present the latest breakthroughs in electro-optics, lasers and the application of light waves at the 2009 Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics/International Quantum Electronics Conference (CLEO/IQEC) May 31 to June 5 at the Baltimore Convention Center in Baltimore.

RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS OF THE MEETING ... include Healing with Light

Star Trek scanners that fix injuries with beams of light may not be science fiction after all. A new optical technology that lines up living cells and controls their movements has opened the door to better artificial tissues and wounds that heal faster with less scarring.

For years, scientists have used the energy in laser light to drill microscopic holes or as tweezers or traps to direct and maneuver small pieces of matter. Guiding entire cells, though, has proven difficult because the lasers used for manipulation tend to damage the structural units of living organisms.

Now Aristide Dogariu and colleagues at the University of Central Florida in Orlando have developed an optical procedure that does not harm cells, but affects their skeletons – an ensemble of slender rods made out of an abundant protein called actin. The actin rods are constantly growing and shrinking inside of cells. The direction in which they grow changes the cell’s membrane shape and dictates where the cell moves.

Dogariu and colleagues use the polarization of optical waves to create a field around the cells in which the growing actin rods line up like a compass in the Earth's magnetic field. These optical fields can be used to guide large groups of cells to line up and move in the same direction.

The technique could be useful for cancer assays, which test the motility of cells, or as a non-invasive, non-toxic boost for regenerative medicine. Though cells have complicated and intriguing mechanisms to sense and communicate where an injury occurs, the possibility of using photonic scaffolds to stimulate and guide cells’ motility to accelerate tissue repair, is now quite promising.

Presentation CMMM2; Monday, June 1, 4 – 4:15 p.m.

Source: Optical Society of America (OSA), (Press Release).
Date: 26 May 2009