| Literature DB >> 23987563 |
Colin D Kinz-Thompson1, Matteo Palma, Dileep K Pulukkunat, Daniel Chenet, James Hone, Shalom J Wind, Ruben L Gonzalez.
Abstract
The optical confinement generated by metal-based nanoapertures fabricated on a silica substrate has recently enabled single-molecule fluorescence measurements to be performed at physiologically relevant background concentrations of fluorophore-labeled biomolecules. Nonspecific adsorption of fluorophore-labeled biomolecules to the metallic cladding and silica bottoms of nanoapertures, however, remains a critical limitation. To overcome this limitation, we have developed a selective functionalization chemistry whereby the metallic cladding of gold nanoaperture arrays is passivated with methoxy-terminated, thiol-derivatized polyethylene glycol (PEG), and the silica bottoms of those arrays are functionalized with a binary mixture of methoxy- and biotin-terminated, silane-derivatized PEG. This functionalization scheme enables biotinylated target biomolecules to be selectively tethered to the silica nanoaperture bottoms via biotin-streptavidin interactions and reduces the nonspecific adsorption of fluorophore-labeled ligand biomolecules. This, in turn, enables the observation of ligand biomolecules binding to their target biomolecules even under greater than 1 μM background concentrations of ligand biomolecules, thereby rendering previously impracticable biological systems accessible to single-molecule fluorescence investigations.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23987563 PMCID: PMC4748375 DOI: 10.1021/nn403447s
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881