A Zeptoliter Volume Meter for Analysis of Single Protein Molecules
Author(s) -
Tor Sandén,
Romain Wyss,
Christian Santschi,
Ghérici Hassaı̈ne,
Cédric Deluz,
Olivier J. F. Martin,
Stefan Wennmalm,
Horst Vogel
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/nl2036468
Subject(s) - biomolecule , fluorescence , analyte , chemistry , molecule , diffusion , analytical chemistry (journal) , volume (thermodynamics) , aqueous solution , aperture (computer memory) , nanoparticle , nanotechnology , materials science , chromatography , optics , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , acoustics , thermodynamics
A central goal in bioanalytics is to determine the concentration of and interactions between biomolecules. Nanotechnology allows performing such analyses in a highly parallel, low-cost, and miniaturized fashion. Here we report on label-free volume, concentration, and mobility analysis of single protein molecules and nanoparticles during their diffusion through a subattoliter detection volume, confined by a 100 nm aperture in a thin gold film. A high concentration of small fluorescent molecules renders the aqueous solution in the aperture brightly fluorescent. Nonfluorescent analytes diffusing into the aperture displace the fluorescent molecules in the solution, leading to a decrease of the detected fluorescence signal, while analytes diffusing out of the aperture return the fluorescence level. The resulting fluorescence fluctuations provide direct information on the volume, concentration, and mobility of the nonfluorescent analytes through fluctuation analysis in both time and amplitude.
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