| Literature DB >> 31604278 |
Qingfeng Zhang1,2, Taylor Hernandez1, Kyle W Smith1, Seyyed Ali Hosseini Jebeli3, Alan X Dai4, Lauren Warning1, Rashad Baiyasi3, Lauren A McCarthy1, Hua Guo5, Dong-Hua Chen6, Jennifer A Dionne7, Christy F Landes8,2,3, Stephan Link8,2,3.
Abstract
Plasmon-coupled circular dichroism has emerged as a promising approach for ultrasensitive detection of biomolecular conformations through coupling between molecular chirality and surface plasmons. Chiral nanoparticle assemblies without chiral molecules present also have large optical activities. We apply single-particle circular differential scattering spectroscopy coupled with electron imaging and simulations to identify both structural chirality of plasmonic aggregates and plasmon-coupled circular dichroism induced by chiral proteins. We establish that both chiral aggregates and just a few proteins in interparticle gaps of achiral assemblies are responsible for the ensemble signal, but single nanoparticles do not contribute. We furthermore find that the protein plays two roles: It transfers chirality to both chiral and achiral plasmonic substrates, and it is also responsible for the chiral three-dimensional assembly of nanorods. Understanding these underlying factors paves the way toward sensing the chirality of single biomolecules.Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31604278 DOI: 10.1126/science.aax5415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728