| Literature DB >> 26734519 |
Francisco Palazon1, Didier Léonard2, Thierry Le Mogne3, Francesca Zuttion1, Céline Chevalier4, Magali Phaner-Goutorbe1, Éliane Souteyrand1, Yann Chevolot1, Jean-Pierre Cloarec1.
Abstract
Single-step orthogonal chemical functionalization procedures have been developed with patterned gold on silica surfaces. Different combinations of a silane and a thiol were simultaneously deposited on a gold/silica heterogeneous substrate. The orthogonality of the functionalization (i.e., selective grafting of the thiol on the gold areas and the silane on the silica) was demonstrated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) as well as time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) mapping. The orthogonal functionalization was used to immobilize proteins onto gold nanostructures on a silica substrate, as demonstrated by atomic force microscopy (AFM). These results are especially promising in the development of future biosensors where the selective anchoring of target molecules onto nanostructured transducers (e.g., nanoplasmonic biosensors) is a major challenge.Entities:
Keywords: ToF–SIMS; XPS; characterization; self-assembled monolayer; surface functionalization
Year: 2015 PMID: 26734519 PMCID: PMC4685923 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.6.233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Schematic representation of the use of orthogonal functionalization techniques to enhance the sensitivity of a plasmonic biosensor (with a constant number of molecules). (A) Functionalization is uniform over the entire surface. The immobilization of probes (c) onto the entire surface, including the LSPR zone (a) and silica substrate (b). The targets (d) are captured far from the LSPR area. (B) Only the nanotransducer is functionalized. Selective immobilization of probes onto the LSPR area (a) only. The targets can absorb onto the silica substrate (b) far from the LSPR zone. (C) Orthogonal functionalization on the nanotransducer and surrounding surface. Selective immobilization of probes onto the LSPR area only, and selective nonfouling treatment (e) on the silica substrate. The targets only bind to the enhanced detection area.
Figure 2An SXI image and XPS spectra of a micropatterned gold on silica substrate sample, orthogonally functionalized with F-thiol and PEG/Si. The analyzed areas for the spectra were roughly 10 μm and their approximate localization is indicated on the image. The scale bar in the image is 100 µm.
Figure 3An SXI image and XPS spectra of a micropatterned gold on silica substrate sample, orthogonally functionalized with MUA and F-silane. The analyzed areas for the spectra were roughly 10 µm and their approximate localization is indicated on the image. The scale bar in the image is 100 µm.
Figure 4ToF–SIMS fluorine mapping of patterned gold on silica surfaces, orthogonally functionalized with F-thiol + PEG/Si (a) and F-silane + MUA (b). The scale bars are 100 μm.
Figure 5AFM height profiles of gold nanostructures on silica. The reference sample (red) was not functionalized or subjected to protein incubation and shows a height consistent with the deposition of 8 nm Ti + 30 nm Au. The streptavidin sample (black) was orthogonally functionalized and subjected to protein immobilization. The increase in size is indicative of the binding of streptavidin on the nanostructure.
Thiol/silane mixtures used for orthogonal functionalization in 25 mL of DCM.
| Compound | Quantity | Molar concentration (approx.) |
| MUA + F-silane | 50 mg/10 µL | 9 mM/1 mM |
| F-thiol + PEG/Si | 100 µL/10 µL | 14 mM/1 mM |
| MU-Biot + PEG/Si | 50 mg/10 µL | 5 mM/1 mM |