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research article

A perspective view on the nanomotion detection of living organisms and its features

Venturelli, Leonardo  
•
Kohler, Anne-Celine  
•
Stupar, Petar  
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March 30, 2020
Journal Of Molecular Recognition

The insurgence of newly arising, rapidly developing health threats, such as drug-resistant bacteria and cancers, is one of the most urgent public-health issues of modern times. This menace calls for the development of sensitive and reliable diagnostic tools to monitor the response of single cells to chemical or pharmaceutical stimuli. Recently, it has been demonstrated that all living organisms oscillate at a nanometric scale and that these oscillations stop as soon as the organisms die. These nanometric scale oscillations can be detected by depositing living cells onto a micro-fabricated cantilever and by monitoring its displacements with an atomic force microscope-based electronics. Such devices, named nanomotion sensors, have been employed to determine the resistance profiles of life-threatening bacteria within minutes, to evaluate, among others, the effect of chemicals on yeast, neurons, and cancer cells. The data obtained so far demonstrate the advantages of nanomotion sensing devices in rapidly characterizing microorganism susceptibility to pharmaceutical agents. Here, we review the key aspects of this technique, presenting its major applications. and detailing its working protocols.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/jmr.2849
Web of Science ID

WOS:000522282700001

Author(s)
Venturelli, Leonardo  
Kohler, Anne-Celine  
Stupar, Petar  
Villalba, Maria I.
Kalauzi, Aleksandar
Radotic, Ksenija
Bertacchi, Massimiliano
Dinarelli, Simone
Girasole, Marco
Pesic, Milica
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Date Issued

2020-03-30

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Journal Of Molecular Recognition
Article Number

e2849

Subjects

Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

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Biophysics

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Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

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Biophysics

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afm

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antibiotic susceptibility test

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cellular metabolism

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nanobiosensors

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nanomechanical sensors

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nanomotion

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single cell investigation

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atomic-force microscopy

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penicillin-induced lysis

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escherichia-coli

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cell

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antibiotics

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resistance

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stiffness

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susceptibility

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sensors

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growth

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LPMV  
Available on Infoscience
April 10, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/168095
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