Browsing by Author "Gopinath, SCB"
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Publication Aptamer-based impedimetric determination of the human blood clotting factor IX in serum using an interdigitated electrode modified with a ZnO nanolayer(Springer-Verlag Wien, 2017) ;Cheen, OC ;Gopinath, SCB ;Perumal, V ;Arshad, MKM ;Lakshmipriya, T ;Chen, Y ;Haarindraprasad, R ;Rao, BS ;Hashim, U ;Pandian, K ;Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment ;Universiti Malaysia Perlis (UniMAP) ;Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS (UTP) ;Department of Oral Biology & Craniofacial Sciences ;University of Malaya (UM) ;Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia (USIM)University of MadrasThis article describes a sensitive impedimetric method for the determination of human blood coagulation factor IX protein (FIX) which is present in extremely low concentration in serum. An interdigitated electrode (IDE) whose surface was layered with zinc oxide was modified with two kinds of probes. One is an antibody, the other an aptamer against FIX. A comparative study between anti-FIX aptamer and anti-FIX antibody showed the aptamer to possess higher affinity for FIX. A sandwich aptamer assay was worked out by using the FIX-binding aptamer on the surface of the IDE. It has a detection limit as low as 10 pM which makes it 4 to 30-fold more sensitive than any other method reported for FIX. Moreover, to practice detection in clinical samples, FIX was detected from the human blood serum by spiking. In our perception, the sensitivity of the ZnO-modified IDE presented here makes it a promising tool for sensing clinically relevant analytes that are present in very low (sub-pM) concentrations. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Gold-nanorod enhances dielectric voltammetry detection of c-reactive protein: A predictive strategy for cardiac failure(Elsevier Advanced Technology, 2019) ;Letchumanan, I ;Arshad, MKM ;Balakrishnan, SRGopinath, SCBThis paper primarily demonstrates the approach to enhance the sensing performance on antigen C-reactive protein (CRP) and anti-CRP antibody binding event. A nanogapped electrode structure with the gap of similar to 100 nm was modified by the anti-CRP antibody (Probe) to capture the available CRP. In order to increase the amount of antigen to be captured, a gold nanorod with 119 nm in length and 25 nm in width was integrated, to increase the surface area. A comparative study between the existence and non-existence of gold nanorod utilization was evaluated. Analysis of the sensing surface was well-supported by atomic force microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, 3D nano-profilometry, high-power microscopy and UV-Vis spectroscopy. The dielectric voltammetric analysis was carried out from 0 V to 2 V. The sensitivity was calculated based on 3 sigma and attained as low as 1 pM, which is tremendously low compared to real CRP concentration (119 nM) in human blood serum. The gold nanorod conjugation with antibody has enhanced the sensitivity to 100 folds (10 fM). The specificity of the CRP detection by the proposed strategy was anchored by ELISA and failure in the detection of human blood clotting factor IX by voltammetry. Despite, CRP antigen was further detected in human serum by spiking CRP to runthrough the detection with the physiologically relevant samples. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Voltammetric immunoassay for the human blood clotting factor IX by using nanogapped dielectrode junctions modified with gold nanoparticle-conjugated antibody(Springer Wien, 2017) ;Gopinath, SCB ;Perumal, V ;Rao, BS ;Arshad, MKM ;Voon, CH ;Lakshmipriya, T ;Haarindraprasad, R ;Vijayakumar, T ;Chen, YHashim, UThe authors describe an electrochemical method for the determination of the blood clotting factor IX (FIX). A nanogapped dielectrode (with a < 100 nm junction) was modified with antibody against FIX, and the resulting system was characterized by both impedance spectroscopy and voltammetry. In order to attain the improved sensitivity, gold nanoparticles were electrostatically attached to FIX. The current to voltage (I-V) measurement was carried out from 1 V to 5 V, where the entire calibration plot with 5 V was taken. This results in a limit of detection as low of 1 pM, which is much lower compared to the real concentration of FIX(87 nM) in human blood serum. The analytical range extends from 1 pM to 0.1 mu M. The electrode is highly specific over other serum proteins.