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Molecular recognition using corona phase complexes made of synthetic polymers adsorbed on carbon nanotubes

Authors
Zhang, JingqingLandry, Markita P.Barone, Paul W.Kim, Jong-HoLin, ShangchaoUlissi, Zachary W.Lin, DahuaMu, BinBoghossian, Ardemis A.Hilmer, Andrew J.Rwei, AlinaHinckley, Allison C.Kruss, SebastianShandell, Mia A.Nair, NitishBlake, StevenSen, FatihSen, SeldaCroy, Robert G.Li, DeyuYum, KyungsukAhn, Jin-HoJin, HongHeller, Daniel A.Essigmann, John M.Blankschtein, DanielStrano, Michael S.
Issue Date
Apr-2014
Publisher
IEEE
Keywords
Carbon nanotubes; sensors; single-molecule imaging; in vivo detection; synthetic antibodies
Citation
2014 40TH ANNUAL NORTHEAST BIOENGINEERING CONFERENCE (NEBEC), pp 1 - 2
Pages
2
Indexed
SCIE
Journal Title
2014 40TH ANNUAL NORTHEAST BIOENGINEERING CONFERENCE (NEBEC)
Start Page
1
End Page
2
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/25864
DOI
10.1109/NEBEC.2014.6972997
ISSN
2160-6986
2160-7028
Abstract
Nanomaterials are often functionalized with biological ligands to enable their use as sensors of biological activity. However, the intricacies of nano-bio interactions are poorly understood, which hampers our ability to design nanomaterial-based sensors. Current experimental tools have been unable to visualize interactions occurring on the nano-bio interface with the spatial and temporal resolution needed to quantify biological interactions at their fundamental length and time scales. To fill the need for concurrent visualization of nanoparticles and biomolecules, we have combined two common microscopy techniques, one being for the study of biomolecules and the other for the study of nanoparticles, into a single instrument that has the capacity to study both nanoparticles and biological molecules simultaneously with spatial and temporal resolution that is appropriate for nanoscale interactions. This novel instrument has been used for the characterization of high-sensitivity sensors by designing synthetic biological polymers to selectively encapsulate single-wall carbon nanotubes. The design of synthetic sensing tools based on nanoparticle-biomolecule hybrids is promising for areas in need of high-specificity sensors, such as label-free detection of molecules within a cell, nanoparticle-based diagnostic tools, and nanoscale therapeutics. We introduce three examples of high-sensitivity and high-selectivity synthetic sensors that have the ability to detect a variety of molecules on a single-molecule scale: riboflavin, L-thyroxine, and oestradiol. These sensors have been used to detect and quantify riboflavin levels within a live murine macrophage cell in real-time. The findings provided herein will enable the development of early-onset diagnostic tools at the level of a single cell.
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COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES > DEPARTMENT OF MATERIALS SCIENCE AND CHEMICAL ENGINEERING > 1. Journal Articles

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Kim, Jong-Ho
ERICA 공학대학 (ERICA 배터리소재화학공학과)
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