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பயோசென்சர்கள் & பயோ எலக்ட்ரானிக்ஸ்

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தொகுதி 14, பிரச்சினை 1 (2023)

மினி விமர்சனம்

Utilizing Nanopore Sensing Techniques for the Detection of Biological Molecules

Luiliana Lubica*

Present day biomedical detecting procedures have fundamentally expanded in accuracy and exactness because of new innovations that empower speed and that can be custom fitted to be profoundly unambiguous for markers of a specific sickness. Diagnosing beginning phase conditions is vital to treating serious sicknesses. Generally, in the beginning phases of the sickness, the quantity of explicit biomarkers is extremely low and at times challenging to distinguish utilizing traditional analytic strategies. Biosensors are currently generating a lot of interest in the medical field due to their ease of use, portability, and speed, as well as their low costs and consistent, dependable results. The ability of low-concentration single-molecule sensors like nanopores to detect biomolecules has the potential to become clinically useful. As a result, blood markers, nucleic acids, and protein detection applications have emerged in this field. The utilization of nanopores presently can't seem to arrive at development for normalization as analytic methods, not withstanding, they guarantee huge potential, as headway is made into settling nanopore structures, upgrading sciences, and further developing information assortment and bioinformatic examination. Based on various types of nanopores, this review provides a fresh perspective on current biomolecule sensing methods, obstacles, and strategies for clinical application.

மினி விமர்சனம்

Biosensing Applications of Graphene Amination by Antibodies toward Grafting

Maxim Basedina

The easy combination of biografted 2D subsidiaries supplemented by a nuanced comprehension of their properties are cornerstones for headways in biosensing advances. The potential of aminated graphene as a platform for the covalent conjugation of monoclonal antibodies to human IgG immunoglobulins is thoroughly investigated in this paper. We investigate the chemistry and its effect on the electronic structure of the aminated graphene prior to and following the immobilization of monoclonal antibodies by utilizing core-level spectroscopy techniques, specifically X-ray photoelectron and absorption spectroscopies. Electron microscopy techniques are also used to examine how the derivatization protocols affect the morphology of the graphene layers. These findings advance and outline the application of graphene derivatives in biosensing as well as hint at the features of the alterations of graphene morphology and physics upon its functionalization and further covalent grafting by biomolecules. Chemiresistive biosensors are fabricated and tested, demonstrating a selective response towards IgM immunoglobulins with a limit of detection as low as 10 pg/mL.

மினி விமர்சனம்

Aptameric Fluorescent Biosensors for the Detection of Liver Cancer

Soumya Albert*

With a low 5-year survival rate after diagnosis, liver cancer is a major worldwide health concern. The current diagnostic approaches combining ultrasound, CT scans, MRI, and biopsy have the limitation of finding detectable liver cancer when the tumour has already advanced to a specific size, frequently resulting in late-stage diagnoses and dismal clinical treatment outcomes. To this purpose, there has been a great deal of interest in developing highly sensitive and selective biosensors to examine relevant cancer biomarkers in the early stage diagnosis and provide suitable treatment alternatives. Aptamers are a perfect recognition element among the many methods since they can bind to target molecules with great affinity and specificity.

ஆய்வுக் கட்டுரை

The Unification of Coulomb's Electrostatic Law with Newton's Gravitational Law: A Generalized Model

Fritz C Jacobs

Our search for the unification of electrostatic force and gravity is one of the most pressing research areas. Sir Newton’s universal gravitational constant G is and has been the key constant in the calculations of classical mechanics for the gravitational potential and force of attraction between two masses, as well as the motion in the solar system. Recent research work on gravity focused on finding low-frequency gravitational waves. In this paper it is shown that, Newton’s gravitational law and Coulomb’s electrostatic law are manifestations of the same fundamental interactions. G depends on the quantum physical composition of matter, being the atomic number/protons (Z) to atomic mass number (A) ratio. All planets orbiting the sun yield, within statistical significance, the same G. However, the reference frame of atomic nuclei is distinctly different for each element and from that of the solar/planetary system. In addition, the definition of what Newton called “gravity” is rooted in the relation of all orbital motion to Kepler’s third law. Kepler’s third law (α=R3/T2) and Sir Newton’s law of gravitational attraction (F=-GMm/R2) are fundamental references for orbital motion. After the full derivation, it is also shown that the coulomb force of attraction (F= -q2/(4πεoR2)) in the hydrogen atom yields a significantly same result as the Newtonian force of attraction between the proton and electron in the hydrogen atom, with a gravitational constant of 7.55 × 1028 N.m2.kg-2. It is shown that the unifying gravitational constant for all matter of nature is G=Z/A {1.525 1892 × 1029} N.m2.kg-2. It is further hypothesised, based on the outcome of the theoretical derivation and correlation of the results between the coulomb and gravitational forces that gravity is electrostatic in nature and that they are reciprocally special cases of the general formula derived and presented in this paper.

The conclusions drawn from the results are supported by the analyses of information, using existing solar system/planetary data and atomic physics data. The results were correlated and confirm the hypotheses.

வர்ணனை

Zero−Length Cross−Linkers Modify Direct Electron Transfer of Glucose Oxidase on Pre-Anodized Paper/Carbon Electrodes for Glucose Biosensors

Xiu Gao*

Simple covalent immobilization of Glucose Oxidase (GOX) on a carbon electrode surface with zero-length cross-linkers resulted in the development of a disposable glucose biosensor with Direct Electron Transfer (DET) of GOX. This glucose biosensor displayed a high electron move rate (ks,3.363 s−1) as well as great proclivity (km, 0.03 mM) for GOX while keeping intrinsic enzymatic exercises. Moreover, the DET-based glucose discovery was achieved by utilizing both square wave voltammetry and chronoamperometric procedures, and it accomplished a glucose location range from 5.4 mg/dL to 900 mg/dL, which is more extensive than most monetarily accessible glucometers. Using the negative operating potential, this low-cost DET glucose biosensor avoided interference from other common electroactive compounds and displayed remarkable selectivity. Especially for self-monitoring of blood glucose, it has great potential to monitor various stages of diabetes, from hypoglycemic to hyperglycemic states.

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