| Literature DB >> 31331490 |
Hong Zhou1, Jing Liu1, Jing-Juan Xu2, Shusheng Zhang3, Hong-Yuan Chen4.
Abstract
Specific nucleic acid detection in vitro or in vivo has become increasingly important in the discovery of genetic diseases, diagnosing pathogen infection and monitoring disease treatment. One challenge, however, is that the amount of target nucleic acid in specimens is limited. Furthermore, direct sensing methods are also unable to provide sufficient sensitivity and specificity. Fortunately, due to advances in nanotechnology and nanomaterials, nanotechnology-based bioassays have emerged as powerful and promising approaches providing ultra-high sensitivity and specificity in nucleic acid detection. This chapter presents an overview of strategies used in the development and integration of nanotechnology for nucleic acid detection, including optical and electrical detection methods, and nucleic acid assistant recycling amplification strategies. Recent 5 years representative examples are reviewed to demonstrate the proof-of-concept with promising applications for DNA/RNA detection and the underlying mechanism for detection of DNA/RNA with the higher sensitivity and selectivity. Furthermore, a brief discussion of common unresolved issues and future trends in this field is provided both from fundamental and practical point of view.Entities:
Keywords: DNA/RNA biosensor; Nanoparticles; Nucleic acids nanotechnology; Point-of-care-testing; Signal amplification; Signal transduction
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31331490 DOI: 10.1016/bs.acc.2019.03.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Clin Chem ISSN: 0065-2423 Impact factor: 5.394