| Literature DB >> 28811551 |
Dong-Kyu Lee1, Ji-Hun Kang2, Junghoon Kwon3, Jun-Seok Lee4,5, Seok Lee1, Deok Ha Woo1, Jae Hun Kim1, Chang-Seon Song3, Q-Han Park6, Minah Seo7.
Abstract
As a candidate for a rapid detection of biomaterials, terahertz (THz) spectroscopy system can be considered with some advantage in non-destructive, label-free, and non-contact manner. Because protein-ligand binding energy is in the THz range, especially, most important conformational information in molecular interactions can be captured by THz electromagnetic wave. Based on the THz time-domain spectroscopy system, THz nano-metamaterial sensing chips were prepared for great enhancing of detection sensitivity. A metamaterial sensing chip was designed for increasing of absorption cross section of the target sample, related to the transmitted THz near field enhancement via the composition of metamaterial. The measured THz optical properties were then analyzed in terms of refractive index and absorption coefficient, and compared with simulation results. Also, virus quantification regarding various concentrations of the viruses was performed, showing a clear linearity. The proposed sensitive and selective THz detection method can provide abundant information of detected biomaterials to help deep understanding of fundamental optical characteristics of them, suggesting rapid diagnosis way especially useful for such dangerous and time-sensitive target biomaterials.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28811551 PMCID: PMC5557762 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-08508-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The strain names with subtype and total protein concentration of each virus samples are represented.
| Subtype-strain name | Total protein concentration (mg/ml) |
|---|---|
| A/NWS/33 (H1N1) | 0.54 |
| A/wild bird/Korea/K09-652/2009 (H5N2) | 0.2 |
| A/Korean native chicken/Korea/k040110/2010 (H9N2) | 0.28 |
Figure 1THz detection of virus samples. (a) Absorption spectra for pallet types of virus included a protein sample (H9N2) and a control sample without virus in it. (b) A conceptual schematic of THz detection of virus samples in liquid state using a nano slot-antenna array based sensing chip. (c) Optical images of dropped virus solutions onto the multi-resonance nano-antenna array before (top) and after (down) THz excitation. (d) Transmittance spectra through multi-resonance nano-antenna that have three resonance peaks, with and without H9N2 sample onto the antenna. (e) The difference in transmitted intensity (ΔT) and shifted resonance frequency from each fundamental resonance peak of multi-resonance nano-antenna (Δf) for H9N2 sample are represented.
Figure 2THz optical properties for various types of virus samples. (a) Normalized THz transmission spectra measured using the single-resonance nano-antenna without virus sample (black), and with selected three viruses, H1N1 (blue), H5N2 (cyan), and H9N2 (magenta). (b) FDTD simulation results of transmittances for the single-resonance nano-antenna and the three different model samples with various composition of dielectric constants (n and κ) are shown. Inset indicates a used geometry for simulation.
Figure 3Virus quantification by nano-metamaterial based THz detection. (a–d) Normalized THz spectra for various concentrations (0, 1, 0.14, 0.28 mg/ml) of H9N2 virus in the buffer solution. (e) The changes in the maximum values of the normalized transmittances (ΔT, magenta closed circle) and shifted resonance frequency (Δf, green closed triangle) are plotted for H9N2 virus in different concentrations as a function of concentration level. The red bar is error bar of buffer solution measurement. Black line and gray dashed line are linear fitting of the transmittance change and frequency shift data, respectively. (f) FDTD simulation results of transmittances for three different model samples with various composition of dielectric constants (n and κ) are shown.
Figure 4Classified map for various virus samples as functions of the frequency shift and transmittance decrement per unit mass. The three different subtype virus show their own frequency shift and mass-normalized transmittance change.