Nanofluidic Pathways for Single Molecule Translocation and Sequencing -- Nanotubes and Nanopores
abstract: Driven by the curiosity for the secret of life, the effort on sequencing of DNAs and other large biopolymers has never been respited. Advanced from recent sequencing techniques, nanotube and nanopore based sequencing has been attracting much attention. This thesis focuses on the study of f...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-298322018-06-22T03:06:08Z Nanofluidic Pathways for Single Molecule Translocation and Sequencing -- Nanotubes and Nanopores abstract: Driven by the curiosity for the secret of life, the effort on sequencing of DNAs and other large biopolymers has never been respited. Advanced from recent sequencing techniques, nanotube and nanopore based sequencing has been attracting much attention. This thesis focuses on the study of first and crucial compartment of the third generation sequencing technique, the capture and translocation of biopolymers, and discuss the advantages and obstacles of two different nanofluidic pathways, nanotubes and nanopores for single molecule capturing and translocation. Carbon nanotubes with its constrained structure, the frictionless inner wall and strong electroosmotic flow, are promising materials for linearly threading DNA and other biopolymers for sequencing. Solid state nanopore on the other hand, is a robust chemical, thermal and mechanical stable nanofluidic device, which has a high capturing rate and, to some extent, good controllable threading ability for DNA and other biomolecules. These two different but similar nanofluidic pathways both provide a good preparation of analyte molecules for the sequencing purpose. In addition, more and more research interests have move onto peptide chains and protein sensing. For proteome is better and more direct indicators for human health, peptide chains and protein sensing have a much wider range of applications on bio-medicine, disease early diagnoses, and etc. A universal peptide chain nanopore sensing technique with universal chemical modification of peptides is discussed in this thesis as well, which unifies the nanopore capturing process for vast varieties of peptides. Obstacles of these nanofluidic pathways are also discussed. In the end of this thesis, a proposal of integration of solid state nanopore and fixed-gap recognition tunneling sequencing technique for a more accurate DNA and peptide readout is discussed, together with some early study work, which gives a new direction for nanopore based sequencing. Dissertation/Thesis Song, Weisi (Author) Lindsay, Stuart (Advisor) Ros, Robert (Committee member) Qing, Quan (Committee member) Zhang, Peiming (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Physics Biophysics Nanofluidic Nanopores Nanotubes Recognition Tunneling Sequencing Translocation eng 162 pages Doctoral Dissertation Physics 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29832 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015 |
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language |
English |
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Doctoral Thesis |
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Physics Biophysics Nanofluidic Nanopores Nanotubes Recognition Tunneling Sequencing Translocation |
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Physics Biophysics Nanofluidic Nanopores Nanotubes Recognition Tunneling Sequencing Translocation Nanofluidic Pathways for Single Molecule Translocation and Sequencing -- Nanotubes and Nanopores |
description |
abstract: Driven by the curiosity for the secret of life, the effort on sequencing of DNAs and other large biopolymers has never been respited. Advanced from recent sequencing techniques, nanotube and nanopore based sequencing has been attracting much attention. This thesis focuses on the study of first and crucial compartment of the third generation sequencing technique, the capture and translocation of biopolymers, and discuss the advantages and obstacles of two different nanofluidic pathways, nanotubes and nanopores for single molecule capturing and translocation. Carbon nanotubes with its constrained structure, the frictionless inner wall and strong electroosmotic flow, are promising materials for linearly threading DNA and other biopolymers for sequencing. Solid state nanopore on the other hand, is a robust chemical, thermal and mechanical stable nanofluidic device, which has a high capturing rate and, to some extent, good controllable threading ability for DNA and other biomolecules. These two different but similar nanofluidic pathways both provide a good preparation of analyte molecules for the sequencing purpose. In addition, more and more research interests have move onto peptide chains and protein sensing. For proteome is better and more direct indicators for human health, peptide chains and protein sensing have a much wider range of applications on bio-medicine, disease early diagnoses, and etc. A universal peptide chain nanopore sensing technique with universal chemical modification of peptides is discussed in this thesis as well, which unifies the nanopore capturing process for vast varieties of peptides. Obstacles of these nanofluidic pathways are also discussed. In the end of this thesis, a proposal of integration of solid state nanopore and fixed-gap recognition tunneling sequencing technique for a more accurate DNA and peptide readout is discussed, together with some early study work, which gives a new direction for nanopore based sequencing. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Physics 2015 |
author2 |
Song, Weisi (Author) |
author_facet |
Song, Weisi (Author) |
title |
Nanofluidic Pathways for Single Molecule Translocation and Sequencing -- Nanotubes and Nanopores |
title_short |
Nanofluidic Pathways for Single Molecule Translocation and Sequencing -- Nanotubes and Nanopores |
title_full |
Nanofluidic Pathways for Single Molecule Translocation and Sequencing -- Nanotubes and Nanopores |
title_fullStr |
Nanofluidic Pathways for Single Molecule Translocation and Sequencing -- Nanotubes and Nanopores |
title_full_unstemmed |
Nanofluidic Pathways for Single Molecule Translocation and Sequencing -- Nanotubes and Nanopores |
title_sort |
nanofluidic pathways for single molecule translocation and sequencing -- nanotubes and nanopores |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29832 |
_version_ |
1718700740862541824 |