Abstract

Cellulose has attracted much interest, particularly in medical applications such as advanced biosensing devices. Cellulose could provide biosensors with enhanced biocompatibility, biodegradability and non-toxicity, which could be useful for biosensors. Thus, they play a significant role in environmental monitoring, medical diagnostic tools, forensic science, and foodstuff processing safety applications. This review summarizes the recent developments in cellulose-based biosensors targeting the molecular design principles toward medical detection purposes. The recognition/detection mechanisms of cellulose-based biosensors demonstrate two major classes of measurable signal generation, including optical and electrochemical cellulosic biosensors. As a result of their simplicity, high sensitivity, and low cost, cellulose-based optical biosensors are particularly of great interest for including label-free and label-driven (fluorescent and colorimetric) biosensors. There have been numerous types of cellulose substrates employed in biosensors, including several cellulose derivatives, nano-cellulose, bacterial cellulose, paper, gauzes, and hydrogels. These kinds of cellulose-based biosensors were discussed according to their preparation procedures and detection principle. Cellulose and its derivatives with their distinctive chemical structure have demonstrated to be versatile materials, affording a high-quality platform for accomplishing the immobilization process of biologically active molecules into biosensors. Cellulose-based biosensors exhibit a variety of desirable characteristics, such as sensitivity, accuracy, convenience, quick response, and low-cost. For instance, cellulose paper-based biosensors are characterized as being low-cost and easy to operate, while nano-cellulose biosensors are characterized as having a good dispersion, high absorbance capacity, and large surface area. Cellulose and its derivatives have been promising materials in biosensors which could be employed to monitor various bio-molecules, such as urea, glucose, cell, amino acid, protein, lactate, hydroquinone, gene, and cholesterol. The future interest will focus on the design and construction of multifunctional, miniaturized, low-cost, environmentally friendly, and integrated biosensors. Thus, the production of cellulose-based biosensors is very important.

Highlights

  • Cellulose is an inexhaustible widespread biopolymer with an interesting structure and characteristics

  • This efficient biosensor was prepared via the immobilization of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and glucose oxidase (GOx) enzymes onto cellulose previously oxidized with sodium periodate (Figure 8)

  • This review presents the usage of cellulose as a supporting material for biosensors in biomedical diagnostics

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Summary

Introduction

Cellulose is an inexhaustible widespread biopolymer with an interesting structure and characteristics. Cellulosic paper biosensors are mainly composed of cellulose strips, and stimuli-responsive active sites usually characterized by their low cost, portability, and being disposable [32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40]. Polymer-based biosensors have received more attention owing to their efficiency in collecting a huge number of analyte molecules to be detected on their sensing surface Within those biosensors, the recent findings of cellulose-based smart materials have paved the way to the utilization of cellulose as a potential candidate for biosensors. Cellulose-based biosensors are characterized by a number of desirable properties, such as sensitivity, rapid response, accuracy, and low cost They play a significant role in environmental monitoring, medical diagnostic tools, forensic science, and foodstuff processing safety applications. This review presents the recent developments and significant applications of cellulosic biosensors

Classification of Biosensors
Cellulose Functionalization
Cellulose-Based Biosensors
Cellulose-Based Optical Biosensors
Label-Free Optical Biosensors
Label-Driven Optical Biosensors
Cellulose-bBased Electrochemical Sensors
Findings
Conclusions and Future Perspectives
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