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A survey of the 2001 to 2005 quartz crystal microbalance biosensor literature: applications of acoustic physics to the analysis of biomolecular interactions

Year: 2007

Journal: J Mol Recognit. 2007 May-Jun;20(3):154-84, 20100827

Authors: Cooper MA, Singleton VT

Last authors: Singleton VT

Organizations: Akubio Ltd., 181 Cambridge Science Park, Cambridge CB4 0GJ, United Kingdom, UK

Country: UK, United Kingdom

The widespread exploitation of biosensors in the analysis of molecular recognition has its origins in the mid-1990s following the release of commercial systems based on surface plasmon resonance (SPR). More recently, platforms based on piezoelectric acoustic sensors (principally bulk acoustic wave (BAW), thickness shear mode (TSM) sensors or quartz crystal microbalances (QCM)), have been released that are driving the publication of a large number of papers analysing binding specificities, affinities, kinetics and conformational changes associated with a molecular recognition event. This article highlights salient theoretical and practical aspects of the technologies that underpin acoustic analysis, then reviews exemplary papers in key application areas involving small molecular weight ligands, carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids, viruses, bacteria, cells and lipidic and polymeric interfaces. Key differentiators between optical and acoustic sensing modalities are also reviewed.