Publications by authors named "Alina Latus"

A rotaxane scaffold incorporating two dithiolane anchoring units for the modification of gold surfaces has been functionalized with multiple copies of a redox unit, namely ferrocene. Surface modification has been first assessed at the single molecule level by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) imaging, while tip enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) provided the local vibrational signature of the ferrocenyl subunits of the rotaxanes grafted onto the gold surface. Finally, oxidation of the redox moieties within a rotaxane scaffold grafted onto gold microelectrodes has been investigated by ultrafast cyclic voltammetry.

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Accurate, sensitive, multiplexed detection of biomarker proteins holds significant promise for personalized cancer diagnostics. Here we describe the incorporation of a novel on-line chamber to capture cancer biomarker proteins on magnetic beads derivatized with 300,000 enzyme labels and 40,000 antibodies into a modular microfluidic immunoarray. Capture and detection chambers are produced from PDMS on machined molds and do not require lithography.

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Multielectronic O(2) reduction reactions (ORR) at Pt surface (and at Au surface for comparison purpose) were examined both in water and in organic solvents using a strategy based on radical footprinting and scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM). Experiments reveal a considerable and undocumented production of OH radicals when O(2) is reduced at a Pt electrode. These observations imply that the generally admitted description of ORR as simple competitive pathways between 2-electron (O(2) to H(2)O(2)) and 4-electron (O(2) to H(2)O) reductions is often inadequate and demonstrate the occurrence of another 3-electron pathway (O(2) to OH radical).

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A surface sensitive to reactive oxygen species (ROS) was prepared by reduction of a diazonium salt on glassy carbon electrode followed by the chemical coupling of glutathione (GSH) playing the role of an antioxidant species. The presence of active GSH was characterized through spectroscopic studies and electrochemical analysis after labeling of the -SH group with ferrocene moieties. The specific reactivity of GSH vs ROS was evaluated with scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) using the reduction of O(2) to superoxide, O(2)(•-), near the GSH-modified surface.

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