| Literature DB >> 26909346 |
S Vigneshvar1, C C Sudhakumari2, Balasubramanian Senthilkumaran2, Hridayesh Prakash3.
Abstract
Imperative utilization of biosensors has acquired paramount importance in the field of drug discovery, biomedicine, food safety standards, defense, security, and environmental monitoring. This has led to the invention of precise and powerful analytical tools using biological sensing element as biosensor. Glucometers utilizing the strategy of electrochemical detection of oxygen or hydrogen peroxide using immobilized glucose oxidase electrode seeded the discovery of biosensors. Recent advances in biological techniques and instrumentation involving fluorescence tag to nanomaterials have increased the sensitive limit of biosensors. Use of aptamers or nucleotides, affibodies, peptide arrays, and molecule imprinted polymers provide tools to develop innovative biosensors over classical methods. Integrated approaches provided a better perspective for developing specific and sensitive biosensors with high regenerative potentials. Various biosensors ranging from nanomaterials, polymers to microbes have wider potential applications. It is quite important to integrate multifaceted approaches to design biosensors that have the potential for diverse usage. In light of this, this review provides an overview of different types of biosensors being used ranging from electrochemical, fluorescence tagged, nanomaterials, silica or quartz, and microbes for various biomedical and environmental applications with future outlook of biosensor technology.Entities:
Keywords: bioelectronics; biosensors; diseases; electrochemical; fluorescence-tag; microbes; nanomaterials; polymer
Year: 2016 PMID: 26909346 PMCID: PMC4754454 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2016.00011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
List of biosensors with principle, applications, and bibliography.
| Sl. No. | Type | Principle | Applications | Bibliography (review/original article) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Glucose oxidase electrode based biosensor | Electrochemistry using glucose oxidation | Analysis of glucose in biological sample | Clark and Lyons ( |
| 2. | HbA1c biosensor | Electrochemistry using ferroceneboronic acid | Robust analytical method for measuring glycated hemoglobin | Wang et al. ( |
| 3. | Uric acid biosensor | Electrochemistry | For detection of clinical abnormalities or diseases | Erden and Kilic ( |
| 4. | Acetylcholinesterase inhibition-based biosensors | Electrochemistry | Understanding pesticidal impact | Pundir and Chauhan ( |
| 5. | Piezoelectric biosensors | Electrochemistry | Detecting organophosphate and carbamate | Marrazza ( |
| 6. | Microfabricated biosensor | Optical/visual biosensor using cytochrome P450 enzyme | For drug development | Schneider and Clark ( |
| 7. | Hydrogel (polyacrylamide)-based biosensor | Optical/visual biosensor | Biomolecular immobilization | Khimji et al. ( |
| 8. | Silicon biosensor | Optical/visual/fluorescence | Bioimaging, biosensing and cancer therapy | Peng et al. ( |
| 9. | Quartz–crystal biosensor | Electromagnetic | For developing ultrahigh-sensitive detection of proteins in liquids | Ogi ( |
| 10. | Nanomaterials-based biosensors | Electrochemical or optical/visual/fluorescence | For multifaceted applications including biomedicine, for example diagnostic tools | Li et al. ( |
| 11. | Genetically encoded or fluorescence-tagged biosensor | Fluorescence | For understanding biological process including various molecular systems inside the cell | Randriamampita and Lellouch ( |
| 12. | Microbial fuel cell-based biosensors | Optical | To monitor biochemical oxygen demand and toxicity in the environment and heavy metal and pesticidal toxicity | Gutierrez et al. ( |
Use of biosensors in disease diagnosis.
| Sl. No. | Biosensor(s) | Disease diagnosis or medical applications |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Glucose oxidase electrode based biosensor and HbA1c biosensor | Diabetes |
| 2. | Uric acid biosensor | Cardiovascular and general disease diagnosis |
| 3. | Microfabricated biosensor | Optical corrections |
| 4. | Hydrogel (polyacrylamide)-based biosensor | Regenerative medicine |
| 5. | Silicon biosensor | Cancer biomarker development and applications |
| 6. | Nanomaterials-based biosensors | For therapeutic applications |
Type of biosensors with applications and characteristics.
| Sl. No. | Type of biosensor | Applications | Characteristics | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Analyte detection: single (S) or multiple (M) | Real-time (***) & sensitivity (***) | Portability (yes/no) | Cost ($$$$) & customization (***) | |||
| 1. | Electrochemical (traditional/old) | Disease diagnosis | S | No & * | No | $ & * |
| 2. | Electrochemical with biofabrification (modern) | Disease diagnosis and environmental monitoring | S & M | *** & ** | Yes | $$ & *** |
| 3. | Optical/visual/fluorescence | Drug development, bioimaging and biosensing | S | *** & *** | No | $$$ & *** |
| 4. | Optical/visual/fluorescence with biofabrification | Drug development, bioimaging and biosensing | M | *** & *** | No | $$$$ & *** |
| 5. | Microbial | Energy production and environmental sensing | S | * & ** | Yes | $$ & ** |
| 6. | Electromagnetic | Protein biology | S | ** & ** | No | $ & * |