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Gold Nano-Island Platforms for Localized Surface Plasmon Resonance Sensing: A Short Review.

Author(s): Badilescu S, Raju D, Bathini S, Packirisamy M

Nano-islands are entities (droplets or other shapes) that are formed by spontaneous dewetting (agglomeration, in the early literature) of thin and very thin metallic (especially gold) films on a substrate, done by post-deposition heating or by using other s...

Article GUID: 33066088

Lab-On-A-Chip for the Development of Pro-/Anti-Angiogenic Nanomedicines to Treat Brain Diseases.

Author(s): Subramaniyan Parimalam S, Badilescu S, Sonenberg N, Bhat R, Packirisamy M

Int J Mol Sci. 2019 Dec 05;20(24): Authors: Subramaniyan Parimalam S, Badilescu S, Sonenberg N, Bhat R, Packirisamy M

Article GUID: 31817343

Nano-Bio Interactions of Extracellular Vesicles with Gold Nanoislands for Early Cancer Diagnosis.

Author(s): Bathini S, Raju D, Badilescu S, Kumar A, Ouellette RJ, Ghosh A, Packirisamy M

Res (Wash D C). 2018;2018:3917986 Authors: Bathini S, Raju D, Badilescu S, Kumar A, Ouellette RJ, Ghosh A, Packirisamy M

Article GUID: 31549028

Tuning of Morphology and Stability of Gold Nanostars Through pH Adjustment.

Author(s): Kumar R, Badilescu S, Packirisamy M

J Nanosci Nanotechnol. 2019 Aug 01;19(8):4617-4622 Authors: Kumar R, Badilescu S, Packirisamy M

Article GUID: 30913757

The effect of hydrogen nanobubbles on the morphology of gold-gelatin bionanocomposite films and their optical properties.

Author(s): Alsawafta M, Badilescu S, Truong VV, Packirisamy M

Nanotechnology. 2012 Feb 17;23(6):065305 Authors: Alsawafta M, Badilescu S, Truong VV, Packirisamy M

Article GUID: 22248640


Title:Nano-Bio Interactions of Extracellular Vesicles with Gold Nanoislands for Early Cancer Diagnosis.
Authors:Bathini SRaju DBadilescu SKumar AOuellette RJGhosh APackirisamy M
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31549028?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1155/2018/3917986
Category:Res (Wash D C)
PMID:31549028
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Optical Bio-Microsystems Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Industrial and Aerospace Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
2 Atlantic Cancer Research Institute, Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada.

Description:

Nano-Bio Interactions of Extracellular Vesicles with Gold Nanoislands for Early Cancer Diagnosis.

Res (Wash D C). 2018;2018:3917986

Authors: Bathini S, Raju D, Badilescu S, Kumar A, Ouellette RJ, Ghosh A, Packirisamy M

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles or exosomes are membrane encapsulated biological nanometric particles secreted virtually by all types of cells throughout the animal kingdom. They carry a cargo of active molecules to proximal and distal cells of the body as mechanism of physiological communication, to maintain natural homeostasis as well as pathological responses. Exosomes carry a tremendous potential for liquid biopsy and therapeutic applications. Thus, there is a global demand for simple and robust exosome isolation methods amenable to point-of-care diagnosis and quality control of therapeutic exosome manufacturing. This can be achieved by molecular profiling of the exosomes for use with specific sets of molecular-markers for diagnosis and quality control. Liquid biopsy is undoubtedly the most promising diagnosis process to advance "personalized medicine." Currently, liquid biopsy is based on circulating cancer cells, cell free-DNA, or exosomes. Exosomes potentially provide promise for early-stage diagnostic possibility; in order to facilitate superior diagnosis and isolation of exosomes, a novel platform is developed to detect and capture them, based on localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of gold nanoislands, through strong affinity between exosomes and peptide called Venceremin or Vn96. Physical modeling, based on the characteristics of the gold nanoislands and the bioentities involved in the sensing, is also developed to determine the detection capability of the platform, which is optimized experimentally at each stage. Preliminary results and modeling present a relationship between the plasmonic shift and the concentration of exosomes and, essentially, indicate possibilities for label-free early diagnosis.

PMID: 31549028 [PubMed]