
doi: 10.4155/bio.15.4
pmid: 25871589
An ability to detect and quantify protein molecules, harbingers of specific pathologies, potentially underpins both early disease diagnosis and an assessment of treatment efficacy. However, the specific detection of a particular protein biomarker in a complex environment is by no means an easy task and requires a progressive improvement in sensor technology. The high surface area, volume, electrical conductance, atomic level thickness and apparent biocompatibility of graphene makes it potentially an exceedingly powerful transducer of biorecognition events; the demands of its application in biosensing, and progress to date are reviewed herein.
Transistors, Electronic, Electrochemistry, Proteins, Graphite, Biosensing Techniques, Biomarkers
Transistors, Electronic, Electrochemistry, Proteins, Graphite, Biosensing Techniques, Biomarkers
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