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Anthony G. Frutos

Researcher at Corning Inc.

Publications -  54
Citations -  3284

Anthony G. Frutos is an academic researcher from Corning Inc.. The author has contributed to research in topics: Surface plasmon resonance & DNA computing. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 54 publications receiving 3214 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony G. Frutos include Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation & University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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DNA computing on surfaces.

TL;DR: The use of the immobilization and manipulation of combinatorial mixtures of DNA on a support to solve a NP-complete problem, and considers a small example of the satisfiability problem (SAT), in which the values of a set of boolean variables satisfying certain logical constraints are determined.
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Surface plasmon resonance imaging measurements of DNA hybridization adsorption and streptavidin/DNA multilayer formation at chemically modified gold surfaces

TL;DR: The subsequent attachment of streptavidin to the biotinylated complements provides a method of enhancing the SPR imaging signal produced as a result of the Hybridization and leads to a 4-fold improvement in the hybridization detection limit of the SPR Imaging apparatus.
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In Situ Surface Plasmon Resonance Imaging Detection of DNA Hybridization to Oligonucleotide Arrays on Gold Surfaces

TL;DR: A new method for constructing oligonucleotide arrays on gold surfaces has been developed, and these arrays have been used in DNA hybridization experiments with in situ surface plasmon resonance (SPR) imaging detection, able to differentiate between single- and double-stranded DNA regions on the gold surface.
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Demonstration of a word design strategy for DNA computing on surfaces.

TL;DR: A series of preliminary experiments are presented that use small arrays of 16mers attached to chemically modified gold surfaces and fluorescently labeled complements to study the hybridization adsorption and enzymatic manipulation of the oligonucleotides.
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Near-Infrared Surface Plasmon Resonance Measurements of Ultrathin Films. 1. Angle Shift and SPR Imaging Experiments

TL;DR: In this paper, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) measurements were applied to the study of ultrathin organic and inorganic films adsorbed onto gold surfaces utilizing near-infrared (NIR) excitation from 800 to 1152 nm.