| Literature DB >> 8651483 |
J B Shear1, E B Brown, W W Webb.
Abstract
Fluorescence detection of fluorogen-labeled neurotransmitters is demonstrated using 100 fs pulses from a titanium-sapphire mode-locked laser to achieve molecular excitation by simultaneous absorption of two and three photons of near-IR radiation. Two-photon excitation spectra are determined for the naphthalene-2,3 dicarboxaldehyde derivative of glycine and the fluorescamine derivative of leucine enkephalin, with the peak excitation cross section (o2) approximately equal to 1 x 10(-50) cm4 s/photon for both species. Three-photon-excitation fluorescence is demonstrated for o-phthaldialdehyde-labeled glutamate using excitation wavelengths between 965 and 1012 nm. The three-photon excitation cross section (o3) remains nearly constant in this wavelength range, with an absolute value of approximately 10(-84)-10(-85) cm6 s2/photon 2. Rapid cycling of analytes through the fluorescent excited state and detection that is free from background caused by Rayleigh and Raman scatter combine to make multiphoton-excited fluorescence a highly sensitive approach for detecting trace amounts of neurotransmitters. Measurements of two-photon-excited fluorescence of fluorescamine-labeled bradykinin and analysis of multiphoton-excited background reveal the potential of this method to detect fewer than 1000 neurotransmitter molecules.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8651483 DOI: 10.1021/ac960007s
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Chem ISSN: 0003-2700 Impact factor: 6.986