Nanoplasmonic Sensing of Disease-associated Extracellular Vesicles - An Ultrasensitive Diagnosis and Prognosis Approach

abstract: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are membranous particles that are abundantly secreted in the circulation system by most cells and can be found in most biological fluids. Among different EV subtypes, exosomes are small particles (30 – 150 nm) that are generated through the double invagination...

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Other Authors: Amrollahi, Pouy (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62786
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-627862020-12-09T05:00:40Z Nanoplasmonic Sensing of Disease-associated Extracellular Vesicles - An Ultrasensitive Diagnosis and Prognosis Approach abstract: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are membranous particles that are abundantly secreted in the circulation system by most cells and can be found in most biological fluids. Among different EV subtypes, exosomes are small particles (30 – 150 nm) that are generated through the double invagination of the lipid bilayer membrane of cell. Therefore, they mirror the cell membrane proteins and contain proteins, RNAs, and DNAs that can represent the phenotypic state of their cell of origin, hence considered promising biomarker candidates. Importantly, in most pathological conditions, such as cancer and infection, diseased cells secrete more EVs and the disease associated exosomes have shown great potential to serve as biomarkers for early diagnosis, disease staging, and treatment monitoring. However, using EVs as diagnostic or prognostic tools in the clinic is hindered by the lack of a rapid, sensitive, purification-free technique for their isolation and characterization. Developing standardized assays that can translate the emerging academic EV biomarker discoveries to clinically relevant procedures is a bottleneck that have slowed down advancements in medical research. Integrating widely known immunoassays with plasmonic sensors has shown the promise to detect minute amounts of antigen present in biological sample, based on changes of ambient optical refractive index, and achieve ultra-sensitivity. Plasmonic sensors take advantage of the enhanced interaction of electromagnetic radiations with electron clouds of plasmonic materials at the dielectric-metal interface in tunable wavelengths. Dissertation/Thesis Amrollahi, Pouy (Author) Wang, Xiao (Advisor) Forzani, Erica (Committee member) Hu, Tony Ye (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Biomedical engineering Bioengineering Health sciences Biosensing Cancer diagnosis Exosomes Extracellular vesicles Nanoplasmonics Pancreatic cancer eng 154 pages Doctoral Dissertation Biomedical Engineering 2020 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62786 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Biomedical engineering
Bioengineering
Health sciences
Biosensing
Cancer diagnosis
Exosomes
Extracellular vesicles
Nanoplasmonics
Pancreatic cancer
spellingShingle Biomedical engineering
Bioengineering
Health sciences
Biosensing
Cancer diagnosis
Exosomes
Extracellular vesicles
Nanoplasmonics
Pancreatic cancer
Nanoplasmonic Sensing of Disease-associated Extracellular Vesicles - An Ultrasensitive Diagnosis and Prognosis Approach
description abstract: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are membranous particles that are abundantly secreted in the circulation system by most cells and can be found in most biological fluids. Among different EV subtypes, exosomes are small particles (30 – 150 nm) that are generated through the double invagination of the lipid bilayer membrane of cell. Therefore, they mirror the cell membrane proteins and contain proteins, RNAs, and DNAs that can represent the phenotypic state of their cell of origin, hence considered promising biomarker candidates. Importantly, in most pathological conditions, such as cancer and infection, diseased cells secrete more EVs and the disease associated exosomes have shown great potential to serve as biomarkers for early diagnosis, disease staging, and treatment monitoring. However, using EVs as diagnostic or prognostic tools in the clinic is hindered by the lack of a rapid, sensitive, purification-free technique for their isolation and characterization. Developing standardized assays that can translate the emerging academic EV biomarker discoveries to clinically relevant procedures is a bottleneck that have slowed down advancements in medical research. Integrating widely known immunoassays with plasmonic sensors has shown the promise to detect minute amounts of antigen present in biological sample, based on changes of ambient optical refractive index, and achieve ultra-sensitivity. Plasmonic sensors take advantage of the enhanced interaction of electromagnetic radiations with electron clouds of plasmonic materials at the dielectric-metal interface in tunable wavelengths. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Biomedical Engineering 2020
author2 Amrollahi, Pouy (Author)
author_facet Amrollahi, Pouy (Author)
title Nanoplasmonic Sensing of Disease-associated Extracellular Vesicles - An Ultrasensitive Diagnosis and Prognosis Approach
title_short Nanoplasmonic Sensing of Disease-associated Extracellular Vesicles - An Ultrasensitive Diagnosis and Prognosis Approach
title_full Nanoplasmonic Sensing of Disease-associated Extracellular Vesicles - An Ultrasensitive Diagnosis and Prognosis Approach
title_fullStr Nanoplasmonic Sensing of Disease-associated Extracellular Vesicles - An Ultrasensitive Diagnosis and Prognosis Approach
title_full_unstemmed Nanoplasmonic Sensing of Disease-associated Extracellular Vesicles - An Ultrasensitive Diagnosis and Prognosis Approach
title_sort nanoplasmonic sensing of disease-associated extracellular vesicles - an ultrasensitive diagnosis and prognosis approach
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62786
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