Alzheimer's Disease (AD), reported for the first time in 1906, is a common disease that remains incurable to this day. In the past, a family of treatments using Cu(II) chelators failed during clinical trials, evidencing the importance of pre-clinical studies. In this work, we performed electrochemical characterisation of TDMQ20, a new potential drug against AD, using electrochemistry and spectroelectrochemistry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The availability of new surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) substrates is essential to develop quantitative analytical methods. Electrochemistry is an easy, fast and reproducible methodology to prepare SERS substrates on screen-printed electrodes (SPEs).
Results: This work proposes new SPEs based on a three-electrode system all made of silver.
Since the FDA's approval of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in 2017, significant improvements have been made in the design of chimeric antigen receptor constructs and in the manufacturing of CAR T cell therapies resulting in increased CAR T cell persistence and improved clinical outcome in certain hematological malignancies. Despite the remarkable clinical response seen in some patients, challenges remain in achieving durable long-term tumor-free survival, reducing therapy associated malignancies and toxicities, and expanding on the types of cancers that can be treated with this therapeutic modality. Careful analysis of the biological factors demarcating efficacious from suboptimal CAR T cell responses will be of paramount importance to address these shortcomings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBidimensional spectroelectrochemistry (Bidim-SEC) is an instrumental technique that provides UV/vis absorption information on electrochemical processes from two different points of view, using concomitantly a parallel and a normal optical configuration. The parallel configuration provides information about chemical species present in the diffusion layer, meanwhile the normal arrangement supplies information about changes occurring both in the diffusion layer and, mainly, on the electrode surface. The choice of a suitable cell to perform Bidim-SEC experiments is critical, especially while working under a thin-layer regime.
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