Nanoscale Sensor Probes Cell’s Pulse

sick liver cells
Liver cells infected with Marburg virus.
(Image credit: CDC / Dr. J. Lyle Conrad via Wikimedia Commons)

(ISNS) -- A heartbeat, or a pulse, is a standard indicator of whether a person or any other animal is dead or alive. But for a single biological cell, checking its viability – its state of being "alive" – is not that simple. 

Knowing a cell's viability is valuable information in studying how an antibiotic works, how toxic substances kill cells and how an infection spreads. However, most viability tests for cells involve invasive procedures – such as injecting a dye into the cell. The tests are expensive and afterward, scientists have to dispose of the cells. 

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