Experimental characterization of a biosensor based on a tapered optical fiber for kisspeptin detection.
González-León. K K; Beltrán-Pérez. G G; Muñoz-Aguirre. S S; López-Gayou. V V; Castillo-Mixcoatl. J J; Alatriste. V V; Delgado-Macuil. R R
Key Findings
- A tapered optical fiber was functionalized with a polyclonal antibody that binds kisspeptin.
- s surface chemistry and uniformity were confirmed using FTIR, optical microscopy, and SEM.",
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study offers no direct protocol, dosage, or health‑related insight about kisspeptin. It is mainly a technical advancement in measuring the peptide, which may become useful for research labs but has limited immediate relevance to self‑directed health optimization.
Summary
The paper describes a new lab tool – an optical‑fiber biosensor that can sense kisspeptin, a hormone linked to puberty and cancer, by measuring changes in light transmission. It focuses on how the sensor is built and validated, not on how to use kisspeptin for health or performance.
Abstract
This paper presents the development of a biosensor based on optical fiber, using a polyclonal antibody kisspeptin receptor as a biological recognition element that is connected to puberty onset and may also help to suppress metastasis in melanoma breast cancer. The fiber surface was chemically prepared to immobilize the antibody. The structural homogeneity of the biosensor, at each stage of the self-assembly, was characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and by measurements of the transmission at the output of the biosensor. The morphological homogeneity analysis was performed by optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. The biosensor developed was checked to detect kisspeptin in brain tissues by spectral transmission using a superluminescent diode. The data were analyzed using principal component analysis. The interaction of the kisspeptin with its counterpart by means of the evolution of the transmission spectrum as a function of time was observed.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-05-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1364/ao.383487
4
26