Single-molecule detection of nucleic acids in body fluids is vital but challenging. This work presents an optical microfiber biosensor with a metal-semiconductor-2D material hybrid nanointerface for single-molecule amplification-free detection of nucleic acids in complex body fluids. By optimizing the nanointerface components, we achieved significant enhancement of the evanescent field, enabling ultrahigh sensitivity at the microfiber surface. It allowed for the detection of DNA molecules at the single-molecule level and could identify single-base-pair mismatches. Utilizing a microscale diameter and millimeter-length design, the biosensor overcomes the limitations associated with nanosensors, providing a practical solution for point-of-care diagnostics. The sensor demonstrated its potential through ultrasensitive detection of HIV nucleic acids in body fluids such as serum, sweat, and saliva. This advancement marks a critical step forward in nucleic acid detection, facilitating early disease diagnosis, personalized medicine, and fundamental biological research, despite challenges posed by the nanosize, chain-like morphology, and environmental interference of nucleic acids.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.4c06490 | DOI Listing |
Zhong Nan Da Xue Xue Bao Yi Xue Ban
October 2024
Medical Research Experimental Center, Shaanxi University of Chinese Medicine, Xianyang Shaanxi 712046, China.
Exosomes are nanoscale extracellular vesicles widely present in various body fluids. They carry a variety of substances, including proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids, and play significant roles in the body by participating in immune regulation, intercellular signal transduction, and the transport of proteins and nucleic acids. Exosomes can regulate tumor development and drug resistance by modulating ferroptosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ethnopharmacol
March 2025
Jiangxi Province Key Laboratory of Pharmacology of Traditional Chinese Medicine, National Engineering Research Center for Modernization of Traditional Chinese Medicine - Hakka Medical Resources Branch, School of Pharmacy, Gannan Medical University, Ganzhou, Jiangxi 341000, China. Electronic address:
Ethnopharmacological Relevance: Pueraria montana var. lobata (PM) has the effects of relieving muscle stiffness and fever, generating body fluids and quenching thirst, resolving rashes, raising yang and stopping diarrhea, unblocking meridians, and detoxifying alcohol. It is commonly used for the management of conditions including stiff neck and back pain, thirst, diabetes, unresolved measles, external fever with headache, dysentery, diarrhea, dizziness and headache, stroke with hemiplegia, chest and heart pain, and alcohol poisoning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Infect Public Health
January 2025
Graduate School of Urban Public Health, University of Seoul, Seoul, Republic of Korea; Department of Urban Big Data Convergence, University of Seoul, Seoul, Republic of Korea. Electronic address:
Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome (SFTS) is a life-threatening emerging infectious disease caused by the SFTS virus. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to gain new insights into the routes of transmission to humans and assess whether tick bites are the dominant mechanism, as previously reported in the medical literature. Original articles were searched through Embase, Medline, and Global Health from 2009 to 2022.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMikrochim Acta
March 2025
School of Health Science and Engineering, University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, Shanghai, 20093, China.
A disposable, self-powered enzymatic biofuel cell (BFC) sensor integrated with a hollow microneedle array (HMNA) for glucose monitoring in interstitial fluid (ISF) is reported. The HMNA enables painless and minimally invasive ISF extraction. The BFC uses dehydrogenase (GDH) in conjunction with NAD, diaphorase (DI), and vitamin K (VK) serving as electron transfer mediators as the anode catalyst and Prussian blue (PB) as the electrochromic cathode.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
March 2025
Gulliver UMR CNRS 7083, ESPCI Paris, Université PSL, 75005 Paris, France.
Colloidal particles self assemble into a wide range of structures under external AC electric fields due to induced dipolar interactions [Yethiraj and Van Blaaderen, , 2003, , 513]. As a result of these dipolar interactions, at low volume fraction the system is modulated between a hard-sphere like state (in the case of zero applied field) and a "string fluid" upon application of the field. Using both particle-resolved experiments and computer simulations, we investigate the emergence of the string fluid with a variety of structural measures including two-body and higher-order correlations.
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