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  • Ameloot, Marcel (5)
  • Ceuninck, Ward A. De (5)
  • Grinsven, Bart van (5)
  • Michiels, Luc (5)
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  • Haenen, Ken (4)
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  • INB - Institut für Nano- und Biotechnologien (4)

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Electronic monitoring of chemical DNA denaturation on nanocrystalline diamond electrodes with different molarities and flow rates (2013)
Murib, Mohammed Sharif ; Grinsven, Bart van ; Grieten, Lars ; Janssens, Stoffel Dominique ; Vermeeren, Veronique ; Eersels, Kasper ; Broeders, Jeroen ; Ameloot, Marcel ; Michiels, Luc ; Ceuninck, Ward A. De ; Haenen, K. ; Schöning, Michael Josef ; Wagner, Patrick
Heat-Transfer Resistance at Solid-Liquid Interfaces: A Tool for The Detection of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in DNA. (2012)
Grinsven, Bart van ; Bon, Natalie vanden ; Strauven, Hannelore ; Grieten, Lars ; Murib, Mohammed ; Jiménez Monroy, Kathia L. ; Janssens, Stoffel D. ; Haenen, Ken ; Schöning, Michael Josef ; Vermeeren, Veronique ; Ameloot, Marcel ; Michiels, Luc ; Thoelen, Ronald ; Ceuninck, Ward A. De ; Wagner, Patrick
In this article, we report on the heat-transfer resistance at interfaces as a novel, denaturation-based method to detect single-nucleotide polymorphisms in DNA. We observed that a molecular brush of double-stranded DNA grafted onto synthetic diamond surfaces does not notably affect the heat-transfer resistance at the solid-to-liquid interface. In contrast to this, molecular brushes of single-stranded DNA cause, surprisingly, a substantially higher heat-transfer resistance and behave like a thermally insulating layer. This effect can be utilized to identify ds-DNA melting temperatures via the switching from low- to high heat-transfer resistance. The melting temperatures identified with this method for different DNA duplexes (29 base pairs without and with built-in mutations) correlate nicely with data calculated by modeling. The method is fast, label-free (without the need for fluorescent or radioactive markers), allows for repetitive measurements, and can also be extended toward array formats. Reference measurements by confocal fluorescence microscopy and impedance spectroscopy confirm that the switching of heat-transfer resistance upon denaturation is indeed related to the thermal on-chip denaturation of DNA.
Rapid assessment of the stability of DNA duplexes by impedimetric real-time monitoring of chemically induced denaturation (2011)
Grinsven, Bart van ; Vanden Bon, Natalie ; Grieten, Lars ; Murib, Mohammed Sharif ; Janssen, Stoffel Dominique ; Haenen, Ken ; Schneider, E. ; Ingebrandt, Sven ; Schöning, Michael Josef ; Vermeeren, Veronique ; Ameloot, Marcel ; Michiels, Luc ; Thoelen, Ronald ; Ceuninck, Ward A. De ; Wagner, Patrick
Heat-transfer based characterization of DNA on synthetic sapphire chips (2016)
Murib, Mohammed Sharif ; Yeap, Weng Siang ; Eurlings, Y. ; Grinsven, Bart van ; Boyen, Hans-Gerd ; Conings, Bert ; Michiels, Luc ; Ameloot, Marcel ; Carleer, R. ; Warmer, Johannes ; Kaul, Peter Michael ; Haenen, Ken ; Schöning, Michael Josef ; Ceuninck, Ward A. De ; Wagner, Patrick Hermann
In this study, we show that synthetic sapphire (Al₂O₃), an established implant material, can also serve as a platform material for biosensors comparable to nanocrystalline diamond. Sapphire chips, beads, and powder were first modified with (3-aminopropyl) triethoxysilane (APTES), followed by succinic anhydride (SA), and finally single-stranded probe DNA was EDC coupled to the functionalized layer. The presence of the APTES-SA layer on sapphire powders was confirmed by thermogravimetric analyis and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. Using planar sapphire chips as substrates and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) as surface-sensitive tool, the sequence of individual layers was analyzed with respect to their chemical state, enabling the quantification of areal densities of the involved molecular units. Fluorescence microscopy was used to demonstrate the hybridization of fluorescently tagged target DNA to the probe DNA, including denaturation- and re-hybridization experiments. Due to its high thermal conductivity, synthetic sapphire is especially suitable as a chip material for the heat-transfer method, which was employed to distinguish complementary- and non-complementary DNA duplexes containing single-nucleotide polymorphisms. These results indicate that it is possible to detect mutations electronically with a chemically resilient and electrically insulating chip material.
Photonic detection and characterization of DNA using sapphire microspheres (2014)
Murib, Mohammed Sharif ; Yeap, Weng-Siang ; Martens, Daan ; Bienstman, Peter ; Ceuninck, Ward A. De ; Grinsven, Bart van ; Schöning, Michael Josef ; Michiels, Luc ; Haenen, Ken ; Ameloot, Marcel ; Serpengüzel, Ali ; Wagner, Patrick
A microcavity-based deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) optical biosensor is demonstrated for the first time using synthetic sapphire for the optical cavity. Transmitted and elastic scattering intensity at 1510 nm are analyzed from a sapphire microsphere (radius 500  μm, refractive index 1.77) on an optical fiber half coupler. The 0.43 nm angular mode spacing of the resonances correlates well with the optical size of the sapphire sphere. Probe DNA consisting of a 36-mer fragment was covalently immobilized on a sapphire microsphere and hybridized with a 29-mer target DNA. Whispering gallery modes (WGMs) were monitored before the sapphire was functionalized with DNA and after it was functionalized with single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and double-stranded DNA (dsDNA). The shift in WGMs from the surface modification with DNA was measured and correlated well with the estimated thickness of the add-on DNA layer. It is shown that ssDNA is more uniformly oriented on the sapphire surface than dsDNA. In addition, it is shown that functionalization of the sapphire spherical surface with DNA does not affect the quality factor (Q≈104) of the sapphire microspheres. The use of sapphire is especially interesting because this material is chemically resilient, biocompatible, and widely used for medical implants.
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