2 results match your criteria: "Canary Center at Stanford University[Affiliation]"
ACS Sens
October 2019
Department of Electrical Engineering and Department of Radiology , Canary Center at Stanford University, 3155 Porter Drive , Stanford , California 94305 , United States.
Despite considerable interest in the development of biosensors that can measure analyte concentrations with a dynamic range spanning many orders of magnitude, this goal has proven difficult to achieve. We describe here a modular biosensor architecture that integrates two different readout mechanisms into a single-molecule construct that can achieve target detection across an extraordinarily broad dynamic range. Our dual-mode readout DNA biosensor combines an aptamer and a DNAzyme to quantify adenosine triphosphate (ATP) with two different mechanisms, which respond to low (micromolar) and high (millimolar) concentrations by generating distinct readouts based on changes in fluorescence and absorbance, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
December 2016
Department of Electrical Engineering and Department of Radiology, Canary Center at Stanford University, 3155 Porter Drive, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
We report the first in vitro selection of DNA nanostructures that switch their conformation when triggered by change in pH. Previously, most pH-active nanostructures were designed using known pH-active motifs, such as the i-motif or the triplex structure. In contrast, we performed de novo selections starting from a random library and generated nanostructures that can sequester and release Mipomersen, a clinically approved antisense DNA drug, in response to pH change.
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