The advent of (bio)nanotechnology has opened innumerable opportunities for technological improvements at the interface of nanotechnology, biological, and medical applications. It requires interdisciplinary collaborations to overcome the hurdles in making these technologies readily available. Nanomaterials have garnered significant attention in developing diagnostic and therapeutic tools as they exhibit excellent properties. As a result, the development and application of nanotechnologies in bioscience is needed for improved diagnosis and treatment.
This Research Topic highlights the presentations from the 2023 NanoBioTech Conference on the advancements in (bio)nanotechnology made by researchers in both industry and academia, in addition to the materials and computational research that make these technologies possible.
The growing demand for early detection and treatment of diseases has spurred the development of innovative diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Bioelectronics, biosensor, and drug delivery system optimization for operations have led to integrating machine learning models that aim to achieve greater performance with fewer resources. This presents opportunities for more experimental and exploratory approaches in nanobiotechnology and can drive research toward a new efficiency level.
This Research Topic seeks to draw attention to how nanobiotechnology and its related fields are advancing bioscience to offer early diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment benefits. We aim to attract high-quality research papers that tackle the challenging question of how nanobiotechnology gives rise to effective diagnostics and therapeutic tools.
We welcome the submission of Original Research, Review, Mini Review, and Perspective articles on themes including, but not limited to:
• Diagnostics: Biosensors, Lab-on-a-Chip Point of Care Diagnostics, Advanced Nano-Bio-Sensor Technologies, Implantable Nanosensors, BioPhotonics, MEMS and NEMS Devices, Nanotechnology based Imaging Technologies
• Therapeutics: Cell Repair therapy, DNA Nanotechnology, Organ-on-a-chip, Nano biopharmaceutics, Novel approaches in guided tissue regeneration, Cellular based Therapy, Medical Robots, 3D printing of organs and tissues, Molecular Nanotechnology, Material – Tissue interaction, Lipid Nanoparticles, Molecular Nanotechnology, Drug Delivery and Nano Particles, Medicinal Nano chemistry, Nanobiomaterials, Nanobiomolecular Engineering
• Nanotechnology: Genetic sequence, Computational nanotechnology, Molecular electronics, Atoms and Molecular Computing, Nanoproteomics and genomics, Mathematical Modelling, DNA Nanotechnology, 4D Printing 3D Printing, Biomaterial designing and modification, Nanofabrication
Keywords:
Nanomaterials, Nanobiosensors, Nanodrug delivery, Flexible Bioelectronics, Biomedical Applications
Important Note:
All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.
The advent of (bio)nanotechnology has opened innumerable opportunities for technological improvements at the interface of nanotechnology, biological, and medical applications. It requires interdisciplinary collaborations to overcome the hurdles in making these technologies readily available. Nanomaterials have garnered significant attention in developing diagnostic and therapeutic tools as they exhibit excellent properties. As a result, the development and application of nanotechnologies in bioscience is needed for improved diagnosis and treatment.
This Research Topic highlights the presentations from the 2023 NanoBioTech Conference on the advancements in (bio)nanotechnology made by researchers in both industry and academia, in addition to the materials and computational research that make these technologies possible.
The growing demand for early detection and treatment of diseases has spurred the development of innovative diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Bioelectronics, biosensor, and drug delivery system optimization for operations have led to integrating machine learning models that aim to achieve greater performance with fewer resources. This presents opportunities for more experimental and exploratory approaches in nanobiotechnology and can drive research toward a new efficiency level.
This Research Topic seeks to draw attention to how nanobiotechnology and its related fields are advancing bioscience to offer early diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment benefits. We aim to attract high-quality research papers that tackle the challenging question of how nanobiotechnology gives rise to effective diagnostics and therapeutic tools.
We welcome the submission of Original Research, Review, Mini Review, and Perspective articles on themes including, but not limited to:
• Diagnostics: Biosensors, Lab-on-a-Chip Point of Care Diagnostics, Advanced Nano-Bio-Sensor Technologies, Implantable Nanosensors, BioPhotonics, MEMS and NEMS Devices, Nanotechnology based Imaging Technologies
• Therapeutics: Cell Repair therapy, DNA Nanotechnology, Organ-on-a-chip, Nano biopharmaceutics, Novel approaches in guided tissue regeneration, Cellular based Therapy, Medical Robots, 3D printing of organs and tissues, Molecular Nanotechnology, Material – Tissue interaction, Lipid Nanoparticles, Molecular Nanotechnology, Drug Delivery and Nano Particles, Medicinal Nano chemistry, Nanobiomaterials, Nanobiomolecular Engineering
• Nanotechnology: Genetic sequence, Computational nanotechnology, Molecular electronics, Atoms and Molecular Computing, Nanoproteomics and genomics, Mathematical Modelling, DNA Nanotechnology, 4D Printing 3D Printing, Biomaterial designing and modification, Nanofabrication
Keywords:
Nanomaterials, Nanobiosensors, Nanodrug delivery, Flexible Bioelectronics, Biomedical Applications
Important Note:
All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.