The cross-reactivity to many analytes is one major limitation of most synthetic receptors (SRs) known so far. Herein, we show that through time-resolved competitive binding assays, even unselectively binding SRs can be utilized for analyte distinction and quantification. Furthermore, our methodology has also been applied to analyte mixtures and can be used in a microplate format
Chemokine receptors are extensively involved in a broad range of physiological and pathological proc...
AbstractG protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediate many important physiological functions and are c...
Molecular recognition is a recurrent theme in chemical sensing because of the importance of selectiv...
Insufficient binding selectivity of chemosensors often renders biorelevant metabolites indistinguish...
Insufficient binding selectivity of chemosensors often renders biorelevant metabolites indistinguish...
Preventive healthcare asks for the development of cheap, precise and non-invasive sensor devices for...
A supramolecular sensor array composed of two fluorescent cucurbit[n]uril-type receptors (probe 1 an...
Non-covalent chemosensing ensembles of cucurbit[n]urils (CBn) have been widely used in proof-of-conc...
textIn the field of supramolecular chemistry a common goal is to design a receptor that is highly s...
textThis dissertation consists of five chapters. The first chapter provides an in-depth background ...
A supramolecular assay based on two fluorescent cucurbit[n]uril probes enables the recognition and q...
Very little information is available on the kinetics of the self-assembly and dissociation of optica...
The biosensor community has long focused on achieving the lowest possible detection limits, with spe...
In a bid to develop synthetic molecules and materials that are capable of biomimicry, there has been...
AbstractChemical warfare agents are a class of organic molecules used as chemical weapons due to the...
Chemokine receptors are extensively involved in a broad range of physiological and pathological proc...
AbstractG protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediate many important physiological functions and are c...
Molecular recognition is a recurrent theme in chemical sensing because of the importance of selectiv...
Insufficient binding selectivity of chemosensors often renders biorelevant metabolites indistinguish...
Insufficient binding selectivity of chemosensors often renders biorelevant metabolites indistinguish...
Preventive healthcare asks for the development of cheap, precise and non-invasive sensor devices for...
A supramolecular sensor array composed of two fluorescent cucurbit[n]uril-type receptors (probe 1 an...
Non-covalent chemosensing ensembles of cucurbit[n]urils (CBn) have been widely used in proof-of-conc...
textIn the field of supramolecular chemistry a common goal is to design a receptor that is highly s...
textThis dissertation consists of five chapters. The first chapter provides an in-depth background ...
A supramolecular assay based on two fluorescent cucurbit[n]uril probes enables the recognition and q...
Very little information is available on the kinetics of the self-assembly and dissociation of optica...
The biosensor community has long focused on achieving the lowest possible detection limits, with spe...
In a bid to develop synthetic molecules and materials that are capable of biomimicry, there has been...
AbstractChemical warfare agents are a class of organic molecules used as chemical weapons due to the...
Chemokine receptors are extensively involved in a broad range of physiological and pathological proc...
AbstractG protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediate many important physiological functions and are c...
Molecular recognition is a recurrent theme in chemical sensing because of the importance of selectiv...