scispace - formally typeset
C

Chen Zong

Researcher at Nanjing University

Publications -  15
Citations -  667

Chen Zong is an academic researcher from Nanjing University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Immunoassay & Detection limit. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 14 publications receiving 614 citations.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemiluminescence Imaging Immunoassay of Multiple Tumor Markers for Cancer Screening

TL;DR: The high throughput and acceptable stability, reproducibility, and accuracy showed good applicability of the proposed multiplex CL imaging immunoassay in clinical diagnosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Manganese porphyrin-dsDNA complex: a mimicking enzyme for highly efficient bioanalysis.

TL;DR: The in situ, HCR-assisted enzyme formation brought numerous enzymatic catalytic centers, MnTMPyP, on the immunocomplex, resulting in significant CL signal amplification and highly sensitive CL detection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Automated Support-Resolution Strategy for a One-Way Chemiluminescent Multiplex Immunoassay

TL;DR: An automated support-resolution strategy was designed to couple with a flow-through immunosensing system for performing a one-way chemiluminescent (CL) multiplex immunoassay approach for clinical applications that employed a single horseradish peroxidase (HRP) label in one way.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemiluminescence imaging for a protein assay via proximity-dependent DNAzyme formation

TL;DR: The proposed array-based CL imaging strategy is applied to detect carcinoembryonic antigen and thrombin and shows wide linear ranges over 4 and 5 orders of magnitude with the detection limits of 0.15 ng mL(-1) and 0.49 pM, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multilayer hemin/G-quadruplex wrapped gold nanoparticles as tag for ultrasensitive multiplex immunoassay by chemiluminescence imaging.

TL;DR: The M-DNAzyme/AuNP as a universal signal tag as well as the protein chip could be suitable for mass production for economical, portable and multianalyte assay, showing a promising potential in application to clinic and other relative fields.