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Chemistry of Bioconjugates: Synthesis, Characterization, and Biomedical Applications

ISBN: 978-1-118-77588-2

February 2014

496 pages

Description

Explores bioconjugate properties and applications of polymers, dendrimers, lipids, nanoparticles, and nanotubes

Bioconjugation has enabled breakthroughs across many areas of industry and biomedicine. With its emphasis on synthesis, properties and applications, this book enables readers to understand the connection between chemistry and the biological application of bioconjugated materials. Its detailed descriptions of methods make it possible for researchers to fabricate and take full advantage of bioconjugates for a broad range of applications. Moreover, the book sets the foundation for the development of new applications, including assays, imaging, biosensors, drug delivery, and diagnostics.

Chemistry of Bioconjugates features contributions from an international team of leading experts and pioneers in the field. These contributions reflect the authors’ firsthand laboratory experience as well as a thorough review of the current literature. The book’s six sections examine:

  • General methods of bioconjugation
  • Polymer bioconjugates
  • Organic nanoparticle-based bioconjugates
  • Inorganic nanomaterial bioconjugates, including metals and metal oxides
  • Cell-based, hydrogel/microgel, and glyco-bioconjugates
  • Characterization, physico-(bio)chemical properties, and applications of bioconjugates

This comprehensive exploration of bioconjugates includes discussions of polymers, dendrimers, lipids, nanoparticles, and nanotubes. References at the end of each chapter serve as a gateway to the most important original research findings and reviews in the field.

By drawing together and analyzing all the latest chemical methods and research findings on the physico-chemical and biochemical properties of bioconjugates, Chemistry of Bioconjugates sheds new light on the significance and potential of bioconjugation. The book is recommended for organic and polymer chemists, biochemists, biomaterial scientists, carbohydrate chemists, biophysicists, bioengineers, and drug and gene delivery scientists.

About the Author

RAVIN NARAIN, PhD, is Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering at the University of Alberta. He has published more than 100 articles in peer-reviewed journals and is the editor of Engineered Carbohydrate-Based Materials for Biomedical Applications (Wiley). Dr. Narain’s research examines nanomedicine and regenerative medicine, with an emphasis on developing new biomaterials for gene delivery and tissue engineering.