Publications by authors named "Speranskaya E"

Samples of sputum, blood, bronchoalveolar lavage, swabs from the oropharynx from 255 military personnel undergoing in-patient treatment with an x-ray confirmed diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) were examined by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The comparison group was included 270 healthy recruits. The detection of S.

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A lateral flow immunoassay (LFIA) was developed for the determination of fumonisin mycotoxins. The fluorescence of CdSe/ZnS quantum dots (QDs), observed at excitation/emission wavelengths of 365/525 nm, is suppressed by the addition of silver nanoparticles (SNPs) or gold nanoparticles (GNPs) because SNPs overlap the excitation bands of the QDs, and GNPs overlap the emission bands. The fluorescence of the QDs is recovered upon addition of fumonisins, allowing for the sensitive detection in "positive mode" of the target mycotoxin by monitoring the changes of the QDs fluorescence intensity.

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Delivery and spatial localization of upconversion luminescent microparticles [Y2O3:Yb, Er] (mean size ∼1.6  μm) and quantum dots (QDs) (CuInS2/ZnS nanoparticles coated with polyethylene glycol-based amphiphilic polymer, mean size ∼20  nm) inside rat skin was studied in vivo using a multimodal optical imaging approach. The particles were embedded into the skin dermis to the depth from 300 to 500  μm through microchannels performed by fractional laser microablation.

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In this work, there is a detailed description of the whole process of biocompatible CIS/ZnS QDs production. Special attention was paid to the stability of QDs against photooxidation. It was shown that Cu/In ratio greatly affected not only nanocrystals PLQYs but photostability as well.

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This manuscript describes synthesis and followed application of silica-coated liposomes loaded with quantum dots as a perspective label for immunoaasay. The hollow spherical structure of liposomes makes them an attractive package material for encapsulation of multiple water-insoluble quantum dots and amplifying the analytical signal. Silica coverage ensures the stability of the loaded liposomes against fusion and internal leakage during storage, transporting, application and also provides groups for bioconugation.

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The aim of this manuscript was the development of easy-to-operate quantum dots (QDs)-based immunochemical techniques for simultaneous screening of several mycotoxins in cereals. Two different approaches for multiplex fluorescent immunosorbent assay (FLISA) were employed. In the first approach a multiwell plate in which the different wells express a different mycotoxin (deoxynivalenol, zearalenone, aflatoxin B1, T2-toxin and fumonisin B1) was considered as a multiplex because each sample was pretreated once and then will be distributed over a series of wells within the same plate (single-analyte multiplex, SAM).

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We report on the synthesis of core-shell CuInS2/ZnS quantum dots (QDs) in organic solution, their encapsulation with a PEG-containing amphiphilic polymer, and the application of the resulting water-soluble QDs as fluorescent label in quantitative immunoassay. By optimizing the methods for core synthesis and shell growth, CuInS2/ZnS QDs were obtained with a quantum yield of 50% on average after hydrophilization. After conjugation with an aflatoxin B1-protein derivative, the obtained QDs were used as fluorescent labels in microplate immunoassay for the quantitative determination of the mycotoxin aflatoxin B1.

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We propose a homogenous multi-analyte immunoassay based on the quenching of quantum dot (QD) fluorescence by means of graphene. Two QDs with emission maxima at 636 and 607 nm were bound to antibodies selective for mouse or chicken immunoglobulins, respectively, and graphene functionalized with carboxylic moieties was employed to covalently link the respective antigen. The antibody-antigen interaction led graphene close enough to QDs to quench the QD fluorescence by resonance energy transfer.

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The paper describes all stages of synthesis and characterization of biocompatible CdSe-based core/shell quantum dots (QDs) and their application as fluorescent label for immunoassay. Special attention was focused on development of maleic anhydride-based amphiphilic polymers for QDs solubilization in aqueous media. In this work two PEG-amines were tried for polymer modification: monoamine Jeffamine M 1000 used previously in some researches and diamine Jeffamine ED-2003 applied for the first time for QDs solubilization.

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Liposomes loaded with water-soluble and water-insoluble quantum dots (QD) were for the first time applied as labels in different heterogeneous immunoassays for the determination of food contaminants, using mycotoxin zearalenone (ZEN) as a model. A great deal of work was devoted to the optimal choice of phospholipids for the liposomes preparation and to the factors which are important for the stability and size of obtained liposomes. Thin-film hydration and reverse-phase evaporation techniques were evaluated in terms of stability of the obtained liposomes and their efficiency for QD loading.

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Three different kinds of immunosorbent assays with luminescence detection were developed for the determination of zearalenone (ZEN), a secondary toxic metabolite of Fusarium fungi. CdSe/ZnS core/shell quantum dots (QDs) were used as a label in quantitative micro-well plate immunoassays (fluorescent-labeled immunosorbent assay, FLISA) and in qualitative column test methods. As carriers for QD-based column tests, sepharose gel (for covalent binding of antibody) and polyethylene frits (for physical absorption of antibody) were used and compared.

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