Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) is a widely used technique for detecting and quantifying target analytes in clinical and research laboratories. One of the main drawbacks of ELISA is the involvement of multiple washing steps that desorbs the capture antigen/antibody off the polystyrene plate, thereby producing inconsistent and erroneous data. To overcome the problem of desorption, we hypothesized that gelatin nanoparticles (GelNP) could serve as a "plate-adherent" substrate to irreversibly adhere the capture antigen/antibody of interest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree-dimensional nanocomposites prepared using two different families of nanomaterials holds significant relevance pertaining to biological applications. However, integration of the two distinct nanomaterials with precision to control the overall compositional homogeneity of the resulting 3D nanocomposite is a synthetic challenge. Conventional reactions result in nanocomposites with heterogeneous composition and render useless.
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