Publications by authors named "Andrew Piper"

Thread-based microfluidics, which rely on capillary forces in threads for liquid flow, are a promising alternative to conventional microfluidics, as they can be easily integrated into wearable textile-based biosensors. We present here advanced textile-based microfluidic devices fabricated by machine stitching, using only commercially available textiles. We stitch a polyester "Coolmax®" yarn with enhanced wicking abilities into both hydrophobic fabric and hydrophobically treated stretchable fabric, that serve as non-wicking substrates.

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Research in electrochemical detection in lateral flow assays (LFAs) has gained significant momentum in recent years. The primary impetus for this surge in interest is the pursuit of achieving lower limits of detection, especially given that LFAs are the most widely employed point-of-care biosensors. Conventionally, the strategy for merging electrochemistry and LFAs has centered on the superposition of screen-printed electrodes onto nitrocellulose substrates during LFA fabrication.

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  • The common approach for encouraging businesses to engage in climate actions focuses on financial gains, framing sustainability as a way to boost profits.
  • A research experiment revealed that narratives emphasizing social responsibility or personal achievement were 55% more effective in prompting businesses to act compared to those highlighting monetary benefits.
  • The results indicate that sustainability communications for business leaders should include a mix of financial, prosocial, and achievement motivations to be more effective.
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Nanoscale electrodes have been a topic of intense research for many decades. Their enhanced sensitivities, born out of an improved signal-to-noise ratio as electrode dimensions decrease, make them ideal for the development of low-concentration analyte sensors. However, to date, nanoelectrode fabrication has typically required expensive equipment and exhaustive, time-consuming fabrication methods that have rendered them unsuitable for widespread use and commercialization.

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The unique properties of hydrogels enable the design of life-like soft intelligent systems. However, stimuli-responsive hydrogels still suffer from limited actuation control. Direct electronic control of electronically conductive hydrogels can solve this challenge and allow direct integration with modern electronic systems.

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Signal amplification strategies are widely used for improving the sensitivity of lateral flow immunoassays (LFiAs). Herein, the artificial miniaturized peroxidase Fe(III)-MimochromeVI*a (FeMC6*a), immobilized on gold nanoparticles (AuNPs), is used as a strategy to obtain catalytic signal amplification in sandwich immunoassays on lateral flow strips. The assay scheme uses AuNPs decorated with the mini-peroxidase FeMC6*a and anti-human-IgG as a detection antibody (dAb), for the detection of human-IgG, as a model analyte.

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  • Graphene-based materials are valuable in electrochemical biosensing because they have high surface areas, unique electrochemical characteristics, and are biocompatible, yet producing graphene electrodes efficiently remains a challenge due to existing methods being slow and costly.
  • A new fast and low-cost technique for creating reduced graphene oxide electrodes was developed, combining laser scribing and inkjet printing with a stamping method to pattern and reduce graphene oxide on polyester sheets.
  • The resulting biosensors demonstrated impressive performance with a low limit of detection and a wide dynamic range, successfully tested in artificial urine and integrated into a portable smartphone-based system, suggesting potential for real-world applications in detecting various pathogenic bacteria.
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Lateral flow assays (LFAs) are currently the most used point-of-care sensors for both diagnostic (e.g., pregnancy test, COVID-19 monitoring) and environmental (e.

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Wearable sensors are a fast growing and exciting research area, the success of smart watches are a great example of the utility and demand for wearable sensing systems. The current state of the art routinely uses expensive and bulky equipment designed for long term use. There is a need for cheap and disposable wearable sensors to make single use measurements, primarily in the area of biomarker detection.

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Fiber-based biosensors enable a new approach in analytical diagnostic devices. The majority of textile-based biosensors, however, rely on colorimetric detection. Here a woven biosensor that integrates microfluidics structures in combination with an electroanalytical readout based on a thiol-self-assembled monolayer (SAM) for Nucleic Acid Amplification Testing, NAATs is shown.

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Textile based biosensors have garnered much interest in recent years. Devices woven out of yarns have the ability to be incorporated into clothing and bandages. Most woven devices reported in the literature require yarns that are not available on an industrial scale or that require modifications which are not possible in large scale manufacturing.

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Nucleic acid tests integrated into digital point-of-care (POC) diagnostic systems have great potential for the future of health care. However, current methods of DNA amplification and detection require bulky and expensive equipment, many steps, and long process times, which complicate their integration into POC devices. We have combined an isothermal DNA amplification method, recombinase polymerase amplification, with an electrochemical stem-loop (S-L) probe DNA detection technique.

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The insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) signaling pathway has been implicated in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) outcomes and resistance to targeted therapies. However, little is known regarding the molecular mechanisms by which this pathway contributes to the biology of NSCLC. The insulin receptor substrate (IRS) proteins are cytoplasmic adaptor proteins that signal downstream of the IGF-1R and determine the functional outcomes of this signaling pathway.

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Nanoelectrodes and nanoelectrode arrays show enhanced diffusion and greater faradaic current densities and signal-to-noise ratios compared to macro and microelectrodes, which can lead to enhanced sensing and detection. One example is the microsquare nanoband edge electrode (MNEE) array system, readily formed through microfabrication and whose quantitative response has been established electroanalytically. Hydrogels have been shown to have applications in drug delivery, tissue engineering, and anti-biofouling; some also have the ability to be grown electrochemically.

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Correction for 'Impedimetric measurement of DNA-DNA hybridisation using microelectrodes with different radii for detection of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)' by Poh Quan Li et al., Analyst, 2017, 142, 1946-1952.

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Due to their electroanalytical advantages, microelectrodes are a very attractive technology for sensing and monitoring applications. One highly important application is measurement of DNA hybridisation to detect a wide range of clinically important phenomena, including single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), mutations and drug resistance genes. The use of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) for measurement of DNA hybridisation is well established for large electrodes but as yet remains relatively unexplored for microelectrodes due to difficulties associated with electrode functionalisation and impedimetric response interpretation.

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  • Biotin is a crucial vitamin involved in lipid metabolism for both plants and mammals, acting as a carbon dioxide carrier.
  • The enzyme BioW from bacteria ensures proper biotin synthesis by selectively combining pimelic acid with CoASH, forming the key building block pimeloyl-CoA.
  • Researchers have manipulated BioW to create valuable synthetic products like heptanoyl-CoA and octanoyl-CoA by revealing its substrate-selection mechanisms and stability through induced mutations.
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The insulin receptor substrate (IRS) proteins serve as essential signaling intermediates for the activation of PI3K by both the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF-1R) and its close family member, the insulin receptor (IR). Although IRS-1 and IRS-2 share significant homology, they regulate distinct cellular responses downstream of these receptors and play divergent roles in breast cancer. To investigate the mechanism by which signaling through IRS-1 and IRS-2 results in differential outcomes, we assessed the involvement of the microtubule cytoskeleton in IRS-dependent signaling.

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We have demonstrated an ultrashort-pulse Yb3+-fiber laser and amplifier system that produces >400-nJ pulses at a repetition rate of 62 MHz (>25-W average power). The output pulses were recompressed to a duration of 110 fs with good pulse quality by use of a standard bulk grating-based compressor.

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