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Applied biosensors

Current Opinion in Biotechnology, 1993
Biosensors are important analytical tools in clinical and environmental monitoring, biotechnological process control, medicine, and in the food and drink industry. This review devotes attention to the most common biosensor in biotechnology, the glucose biosensor, and to recent contributions to the rapidly growing field of optical biosensors. Trends and
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Gravimetric biosensors

2020
Gravimetric transducers produce a signal based on a change in mass. These transducers can be used to construct gas sensors or biosensors using odorant binding proteins (OBPs) as recognition elements for small volatile organic compounds. The methods described in this chapter are based on the immobilization of the OBPs onto functionalized (activated ...
Cali, Khasim   +2 more
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Microcantilever biosensors

Methods, 2005
Biosensors are sensors in which biomolecular interactions are used as sensing reactions. Biomolecular interactions, when combined with a microcantilever platform, can produce an extremely powerful biosensing design. The resonance frequency of a microcantilever shifts sensitively due to mass loading from molecular interaction as in the case of any ...
Karolyn M, Hansen, Thomas, Thundat
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Mitochondrial biosensors

The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, 2014
Biosensors offer an innovative tool for measuring the dynamics of a wide range of metabolites in living organisms. Biosensors are genetically encoded, and thus can be specifically targeted to specific compartments of organelles by fusion to proteins or targeting sequences.
De Michele Roberto   +2 more
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Biosensor Development

Pharmaceutical Research, 1992
This article reviews the recent biosensor developments for medical applications, focusing on the various biological recognition elements used in biosensors and the systems transduction mechanisms. Available instruments utilizing biosensor technology are also examined from a commercial perspective.
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Microbial biosensors

Biosensors and Bioelectronics, 2001
A microbial biosensor consists of a transducer in conjunction with immobilised viable or non-viable microbial cells. Non-viable cells obtained after permeabilisation or whole cells containing periplasmic enzymes have mostly been used as an economical substitute for enzymes.
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Optical Biosensors

Chemical Reviews, 2008
("a Most-Accessed Article for the first-quarter of 2008" (according to the Am. Chem. Soc.)
Sergey M, Borisov, Otto S, Wolfbeis
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Plasmonic Nanopipette Biosensor

Analytical Chemistry, 2014
Integrating a SERS immunoassay on a plasmonic "patch clamp" nanopipette enabled nanobiosensing for the detection of IgG. A SERS response was obtained using a sandwich assay benefiting from plasmon coupling between a capture Au nanoparticle (AuNP) on a nanotip and a second AuNP modified with a Raman active reporter and an antibody selective for IgG. The
Masson, F.   +6 more
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Fluorescence-Based Biosensors

2012
The field of optical sensors has been a growing research area over the last three decades. A wide range of books and review articles has been published by experts in the field who have highlighted the advantages of optical sensing over other transduction methods.
STRIANESE, MARIA   +5 more
openaire   +6 more sources

Electrochemical glucose biosensors

Chemical Reviews, 2007
First-generation glucose biosensors relied on the use of the natural oxygen cosubstrate and the production and detection of hydrogen peroxide and were much simpler, especially when miniaturized sensors are concerned. More sophisticated bioelectronic systems for enhancing the electrical response, based on patterned monolayer or multilayer assemblies and
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