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Protein destruction by atmospheric pressure glow discharges

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journal contribution
posted on 2013-03-27, 15:14 authored by X.T. Deng, J.J. Shi, H.L. Chen, M.G. Kong
It is well established that atmospheric pressure glow discharges are capable of bacterial inactivation. Much less known is their ability to destruct infectious proteins, even though surgical instruments are often contaminated by both bacteria and proteinaceous matters. In this letter, the authors present a study of protein destruction using a low-temperature atmospheric dielectric-barrier discharge jet. Clear evidences of protein removal are presented with data of several complimentary experiments using scanning electron microscopy, electron dispersive x-ray analysis, electrophoresis, laser-induced fluorescence microscopy, and protein reduction kinetics. Considerable degradation is observed of protein fragments that remain on their substrate surface after plasma treatment.

History

Citation

Applied Physics Letters, 2007, 90 (1), 3903

Author affiliation

MRC Toxicology Unit

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Applied Physics Letters

Publisher

American Institute of Physics

issn

0003-6951

eissn

1077-3118

Copyright date

2007

Available date

2013-03-27

Publisher version

http://link.aip.org/link/?apl/90/013903

Language

en

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