3/26/2019 Ryann Monahan, ECE ILLINOIS 2 min read
Written by Ryann Monahan, ECE ILLINOIS
A new technology developed by ECE ILLINOIS professor Jean-Pierre Leburton provides the technological ingredients for the development of nanoscale and personal medicine in the search for cancer cures.
“The source of various cancers can be traced in multiple ways affecting the DNA molecule that our invention can detect quickly, reliably, and cheaply,” Leburton said.
Currently, DNA sequencing is achieved by biochemical techniques that typically require large laboratory facilities. Leburton’s innovation eliminates that roadblock. It is based on nanoelectronic technology that was successful in enabling system miniaturization, efficiency, and new information processing capabilities.
“It opens the door to personalized medicine, where everybody could in principle own their personal medical kit to check their DNA for possible sources of diseases,” Leburton explained.
In the meantime, Leburton and his team are pursuing their research toward new approaches to refine bio-molecular detection by implementing their technique for exploitation in new kinds of applications such as the storage of big data in DNA molecules.
Leburton is affiliated with the MNTL. His work was supported by Oxford Nanopore Technologies