Enhanced Precision Offered by Novel Tool for Medical Biosensors

Enhanced Precision Offered by Novel Tool for Medical Biosensors

For more than 20⁤ years, Li-Qun ⁢”Andrew” Gu ⁢at the University of Missouri has developed a passion‌ for solving life science problems by creating sophisticated diagnostic tools—in nanoscale.

Recently, Gu, a professor in‍ the Chemical and Biomedical Engineering Department and investigator in the ⁢Dalton ​Cardiovascular Research ⁢Center, and a team ‌of ​researchers developed a new method using nanopores—a nanometer-sized hole—to help scientists advance their discoveries in neuroscience and other​ medical applications. In context, the thickness of a single sheet of paper is about 100,000 nanometers.

“Potential applications include studying the structures of DNA- and RNA-based​ diseases and disorders, such as COVID-19, HIV and ⁢certain types of cancers, to see⁢ how drug therapies work. Or‍ we‍ could potentially ‍discover new small-molecule ⁢drug compounds that can be⁢ used in future drug discoveries,” Gu said. “Also, the tool could help in the development of sensors for neurotransmitters ​for studies in neurochemistry and neurodegenerative disease diagnostics.”

The technique involves‍ aptamers, or single strands of DNA or RNA molecules⁢ that selectively bind to a specific target. This allows ⁤researchers to know⁢ exactly what they are detecting with the nanopores and study‌ how individual molecules are interacting with each ​other, said Kevin Gillis, a co-corresponding ‍author⁢ on the study.

Gillis, who is a professor and chair of the​ Chemical‍ and Biomedical Engineering Department and investigator in the Dalton ‍Cardiovascular Research Center, said the interaction between single molecules is detected through tiny ion‍ currents through a nanopore.

2023-08-08 19:00:04
Source ⁢from phys.org

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