Description
1888PressRelease - The little feet animals indicate the arrival of the future mine detectors. The laboratory mouse through gene modification method will be used for searching TNT explosives.
Super Transgenic Mice Can Detect TNT Sensitivity, Which Is 500 Times More Than
Ordinary Mice
1888 PressRelease - The little feet animals indicate the arrival of the future mine detectors. The laboratory
mouse through gene modification method will be used for searching TNT explosives.
The little feet animals indicate the arrival of the future mine detectors. The laboratory mouse through gene
modification method will be used for searching TNT explosives. The idea has become a reality in a
laboratory in New York. The mice are 500 times greater than normal mice in detecting DNT, the same with
TNT, and they are able to alert people the presence of a mine with a fall.
A biological Engineer Charlotte D'Hulst at Hunter Institute of Technology in New York said: "Regardless of
how they react, we think we can track their behavior by implanting a microchip in their skin, which can
actually transmit their behavior to a computer." According to the United Nations, the rat has helped to save
people's lives where the mine kills 15,000 to 20,000 people every year. A Belgian non-profit organization
has trained a large African kangaroo to find a mine explosion in a few hours, compared with metal
detectors which need a few days.
However, the kangaroo needs to be trained for 9 months with a banana food reward. "The transgenic mice
can reproduce more quickly and require less training time," D'Hulst said. "The main advantage of this
approach is that we will create a super sensitive animal to the genetic DNT, which makes the training speed
greatly accelerated. Mice are small, cheap and easy to breed, so it is possible to make more animals work at
the same time (about 500)."
Recent research suggests that the rat may fall down when smell TNT. But, regardless of how they react,
researchers are expected to use implanted microchip to detect whether rats have found the explosives.
D'Hulst and her colleagues still need to test the reaction the rats to DNT in the lab and in the field. But she
hopes that if everything goes well, the mice will be able to be used in 5 years.
Reference reading about transgenic mice:http://www.creative-animodel.com/Animal-Model-
Development/Transgenic-Animals.htmlhttp://www.creative-animodel.com/
doc_943513681.doc
1888PressRelease - The little feet animals indicate the arrival of the future mine detectors. The laboratory mouse through gene modification method will be used for searching TNT explosives.
Super Transgenic Mice Can Detect TNT Sensitivity, Which Is 500 Times More Than
Ordinary Mice
1888 PressRelease - The little feet animals indicate the arrival of the future mine detectors. The laboratory
mouse through gene modification method will be used for searching TNT explosives.
The little feet animals indicate the arrival of the future mine detectors. The laboratory mouse through gene
modification method will be used for searching TNT explosives. The idea has become a reality in a
laboratory in New York. The mice are 500 times greater than normal mice in detecting DNT, the same with
TNT, and they are able to alert people the presence of a mine with a fall.
A biological Engineer Charlotte D'Hulst at Hunter Institute of Technology in New York said: "Regardless of
how they react, we think we can track their behavior by implanting a microchip in their skin, which can
actually transmit their behavior to a computer." According to the United Nations, the rat has helped to save
people's lives where the mine kills 15,000 to 20,000 people every year. A Belgian non-profit organization
has trained a large African kangaroo to find a mine explosion in a few hours, compared with metal
detectors which need a few days.
However, the kangaroo needs to be trained for 9 months with a banana food reward. "The transgenic mice
can reproduce more quickly and require less training time," D'Hulst said. "The main advantage of this
approach is that we will create a super sensitive animal to the genetic DNT, which makes the training speed
greatly accelerated. Mice are small, cheap and easy to breed, so it is possible to make more animals work at
the same time (about 500)."
Recent research suggests that the rat may fall down when smell TNT. But, regardless of how they react,
researchers are expected to use implanted microchip to detect whether rats have found the explosives.
D'Hulst and her colleagues still need to test the reaction the rats to DNT in the lab and in the field. But she
hopes that if everything goes well, the mice will be able to be used in 5 years.
Reference reading about transgenic mice:http://www.creative-animodel.com/Animal-Model-
Development/Transgenic-Animals.htmlhttp://www.creative-animodel.com/
doc_943513681.doc