TY - JOUR
T1 - Liquid crystals
T2 - A novel approach for cancer detection and treatment
AU - Vallamkondu, Jayalakshmi
AU - Corgiat, Edwin Bernard
AU - Buchaiah, Gollapelli
AU - Kandimalla, Ramesh
AU - Reddy, P. Hemachandra
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding: We sincerely thank Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB grant NO. ECR/2016/000559) for grant support to VJ; Department of Biotechnology (DBT-Ramalingaswami Fellowship NO. BT/RLF/Reentry/22/2016) for grant support to RK; NIH grants AG042178, AG047812, NS105473 and AG60683, Garrison Family Foundation; The CH Foundation; and Alzheimer’s Association SAGA for financial support to PHR. APC charges are met from DBT-Ramalingaswami Fellowship grant.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2018/11/21
Y1 - 2018/11/21
N2 - Liquid crystals are defined as the fourth state of matter forming between solid and liquid states. Earlier the applications of liquid crystals were confined to electronic instruments, but recent research findings suggest multiple applications of liquid crystals in biology and medicine. Here, the purpose of this review article is to discuss the potential biological impacts of liquid crystals in the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer along with the risk assessment. In this review, we also discussed the recent advances of liquid crystals in cancer biomarker detection and treatment in multiple cell line models. Cases reviewed here will demonstrate that cancer diagnostics based on the multidisciplinary technology and intriguingly utilization of liquid crystals may become an alternative to regular cancer detection methodologies. Additionally, we discussed the formidable challenges and problems in applying liquid crystal technologies. Solving these problems will require great effort and the way forward is through the multidisciplinary collaboration of physicists, biologists, chemists, material-scientists, clinicians, and engineers. The triumphant outcome of these liquid crystals and their applications in cancer research would be convenient testing for the detection of cancer and may result in treating the cancer patients non-invasively.
AB - Liquid crystals are defined as the fourth state of matter forming between solid and liquid states. Earlier the applications of liquid crystals were confined to electronic instruments, but recent research findings suggest multiple applications of liquid crystals in biology and medicine. Here, the purpose of this review article is to discuss the potential biological impacts of liquid crystals in the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer along with the risk assessment. In this review, we also discussed the recent advances of liquid crystals in cancer biomarker detection and treatment in multiple cell line models. Cases reviewed here will demonstrate that cancer diagnostics based on the multidisciplinary technology and intriguingly utilization of liquid crystals may become an alternative to regular cancer detection methodologies. Additionally, we discussed the formidable challenges and problems in applying liquid crystal technologies. Solving these problems will require great effort and the way forward is through the multidisciplinary collaboration of physicists, biologists, chemists, material-scientists, clinicians, and engineers. The triumphant outcome of these liquid crystals and their applications in cancer research would be convenient testing for the detection of cancer and may result in treating the cancer patients non-invasively.
KW - Antitumor drug
KW - Biomarker
KW - Biosensor
KW - Cancers
KW - Liquid crystals
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U2 - 10.3390/cancers10110462
DO - 10.3390/cancers10110462
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85057199361
SN - 2072-6694
VL - 10
JO - Cancers
JF - Cancers
IS - 11
M1 - 462
ER -