Opendata, web and dolomites

GrapheneBiosensor SIGNED

Electrochemical Graphene Sensors as Early Alert Tools for Algal Toxin Detection in Water

Total Cost €

0

EC-Contrib. €

0

Partnership

0

Views

0

 GrapheneBiosensor project word cloud

Explore the words cloud of the GrapheneBiosensor project. It provides you a very rough idea of what is the project "GrapheneBiosensor" about.

guideline    toxin    microcystin    blue    2a    organization    intrahepatic    graphene    harmful    damage    toxic    episodes    agricultural    1998    portable    conventional    physical    run    manufacturing    material    phosphatases    hplc    responsible    electrical    aqueous    worldwide    algal    poisonings    broad    surface    probably    waste    purpose    chromatography    animals    contained    confirmed    electrochemical    performance    concentration    candidate    had    water    electrochemically    immune    mu    rapid    urban    skills    time    drinking    cyanobacteria    situ    liver    microcystins    ppl    conductivity    sensitive    acute    biochemical    mc    bio    alternatives    ing    monitoring    assigned    off    ms    spectrometry    detergents    inhibiting    warming    instruments    fit    anthropogenic    protein    hemorrhage    functionalization    health    provisional    expensive    potentials    mass    solutions    sophisticated    demanding    frequently    assays    algae    liquid    prevent    times    blooms    area    laboratory    sources    quality    occurrence    lr    limit    active    prolonged    massive    detect    global    ease    pp2a    potent    consuming    immunosensors    bodies    world    followed    death    biosensors    humans    eutrophication    exposure   

Project "GrapheneBiosensor" data sheet

The following table provides information about the project.

Coordinator
SWANSEA UNIVERSITY 

Organization address
address: SINGLETON PARK
city: SWANSEA
postcode: SA2 8PP
website: www.swan.ac.uk

contact info
title: n.a.
name: n.a.
surname: n.a.
function: n.a.
email: n.a.
telephone: n.a.
fax: n.a.

 Coordinator Country United Kingdom [UK]
 Total cost 195˙454 €
 EC max contribution 195˙454 € (100%)
 Programme 1. H2020-EU.1.3.2. (Nurturing excellence by means of cross-border and cross-sector mobility)
 Code Call H2020-MSCA-IF-2016
 Funding Scheme MSCA-IF-EF-ST
 Starting year 2017
 Duration (year-month-day) from 2017-09-26   to  2019-11-07

 Partnership

Take a look of project's partnership.

# participants  country  role  EC contrib. [€] 
1    SWANSEA UNIVERSITY UK (SWANSEA) coordinator 195˙454.00

Map

 Project objective

Episodes of harmful blue algae blooms and the associated algal toxin microcystin-LR (MC-LR) occur frequently in bodies of water worldwide as consequences of eutrophication resulting from anthropogenic activities such as agricultural run-off, urban waste, and manufacturing of detergents and global warming. It had been confirmed that microcystins were responsible for some poisonings of animals and humans where water sources contained toxic cyanobacteria blooms. Microcystins were potent and specific in inhibiting protein phosphatases 1 and 2A (PPl, PP2A). Acute or prolonged exposure to microcystins would cause liver damage, followed by a massive intrahepatic hemorrhage and probably leading to death. In 1998, the provisional guideline concentration limit of 1 μg/L MC-LR in drinking water was assigned by the World Health Organization (WHO). The development of reliable methods for monitoring MC-LR in water resources is of great interest to determine the occurrence and to prevent exposure to the toxin. Several methods have been developed to detect MC-LR, such as high-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (HPLC/MS) , bio-, biochemical- and immune-assays, which require long processing times, sophisticated instruments, complex procedures, or high processing cost and are in general used in the laboratory, not in situ. A sensitive, specific, simple, and rapid method for monitoring MC-LR could help to prevent exposure to the toxin. The unique physical and electrochemical properties (e.g., high electrical conductivity, ease of functionalization, high electrochemically active surface area, and broad range of working potentials in aqueous solutions) of graphene make them a candidate material for developing novel and fit-for-purpose electrochemical biosensors/immunosensors as alternatives to the time-consuming, expensive, non-portable and often skills-demanding conventional methods of analysis involved in water quality assessment.

 Publications

year authors and title journal last update
List of publications.
2018 Wei Zhang, Mike B. Dixon, Christopher Saint, Kar Seng Teng, Hiroaki Furumai
Electrochemical Biosensing of Algal Toxins in Water: The Current State-of-the-Art
published pages: 1233-1245, ISSN: 2379-3694, DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.8b00359
ACS Sensors 3/7 2020-02-27
2018 Wei Zhang, Baoping Jia, Hiroaki Furumai
Fabrication of graphene film composite electrochemical biosensor as a pre-screening algal toxin detection tool in the event of water contamination
published pages: , ISSN: 2045-2322, DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-28959-w
Scientific Reports 8/1 2020-02-27

Are you the coordinator (or a participant) of this project? Plaese send me more information about the "GRAPHENEBIOSENSOR" project.

For instance: the website url (it has not provided by EU-opendata yet), the logo, a more detailed description of the project (in plain text as a rtf file or a word file), some pictures (as picture files, not embedded into any word file), twitter account, linkedin page, etc.

Send me an  email (fabio@fabiodisconzi.com) and I put them in your project's page as son as possible.

Thanks. And then put a link of this page into your project's website.

The information about "GRAPHENEBIOSENSOR" are provided by the European Opendata Portal: CORDIS opendata.

More projects from the same programme (H2020-EU.1.3.2.)

AsymmFlow (2020)

Go with the continuous flow: Asymmetric Synthesis of Bioactive Alkaloids by Multistep Continuous-Flow Processes

Read More  

ASIQS (2019)

Antiferromagnetic spintronics investigated by quantum sensing techniques

Read More  

HOCOM (2019)

A Transparent Hole Conductor by Combinatorial Techniques for Next-Generation Energy Conversion Devices

Read More