Recent advances in electrogenerated chemiluminescence biosensing methods for pharmaceuticals

Electrogenerated chemiluminescence (electrochemiluminescence, ECL) generates species at electrode surfaces, which undergoes electron-transfer reactions and forms excited states to emit light. It has become a very powerful analytical technique and has been widely used in such as clinical testing, bio...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yu Zhang, Rui Zhang, Xiaolin Yang, Honglan Qi, Chengxiao Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-02-01
Series:Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095177918301084
Description
Summary:Electrogenerated chemiluminescence (electrochemiluminescence, ECL) generates species at electrode surfaces, which undergoes electron-transfer reactions and forms excited states to emit light. It has become a very powerful analytical technique and has been widely used in such as clinical testing, biowarfare agent detection, and pharmaceutical analysis. This review focuses on the current trends of molecular recognition-based biosensing methods for pharmaceutical analysis since 2010. It introduces a background of ECL and presents the recent ECL developments in ECL immunoassay (ECLIA), immunosensors, enzyme-based biosensors, aptamer-based biosensors, and molecularly imprinted polymers (MIP)-based sensors. At last, the future perspective for these analytical methods is briefly discussed. Keywords: Electrogenerated chemiluminescence, Pharmaceutical analysis, Immunoassay, Biosensors
ISSN:2095-1779