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Rice breakthrough could make automated dosing systems universal

HOUSTON – Rice University synthetic biologists have found a way to piggyback on the glucose monitoring technology used in automated insulin dosing systems and make it universally applicable for the monitoring and dosing of virtually any drug.

In a recently published study in Nature Communications, researchers in the lab of Caroline Ajo-Franklin demonstrated the technique by modifying a blood-glucose sensor to detect the anticancer drug afimoxifene , an estrogen inhibitor that patient’s bodies also make after they take the chemotherapy tamoxifen.

By building on mature biosensing technology that’s commercially available at most drug stores for under $20, Ajo-Franklin’s team hopes to speed the development of automated dosing systems for chemotherapies and other drugs as well as other technologies for real-time monitoring of biomarkers in the blood.

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labnews.ai 的主编是 Marita Vollborn 和 Vlad Georgescu。自 1994 年以来,他们一直是畅销书作家、科学作家和科学记者。更多关于他们的写作信息,请访问 X-Press Journalistenbüro (https://xpress-journalisten.com)。更多维基百科信息:关于 Marita:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marita_Vollborn 关于 Vlad:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlad_Georgescu
LabNews Media LLC

LabNews Media LLC

labnews.ai 的主编是 Marita Vollborn 和 Vlad Georgescu。自 1994 年以来,他们一直是畅销书作家、科学作家和科学记者。更多关于他们的写作信息,请访问 X-Press Journalistenbüro (https://xpress-journalisten.com)。更多维基百科信息:关于 Marita:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marita_Vollborn 关于 Vlad:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlad_Georgescu