Transmissive Nanohole Arrays for Massively-Parallel Optical Biosensing
Author(s) -
Yanan Wang,
Archana Kar,
Andrew S. Paterson,
Katerina Kourentzi,
Han Le,
Paul Ruchhoeft,
Richard C. Willson,
Jiming Bao
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
acs photonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.735
H-Index - 89
ISSN - 2330-4022
DOI - 10.1021/ph400111u
Subject(s) - materials science , biosensor , microscope , analyte , optical microscope , optics , transmission (telecommunications) , brightness , nanotechnology , microscopy , optoelectronics , chemistry , physics , computer science , scanning electron microscope , telecommunications , composite material
A high-throughput optical biosensing technique is proposed and demonstrated. This hybrid technique combines optical transmission of nanoholes with colorimetric silver staining. The size and spacing of the nanoholes are chosen so that individual nanoholes can be independently resolved in massive parallel using an ordinary transmission optical microscope, and, in place of determining a spectral shift, the brightness of each nanohole is recorded to greatly simplify the readout. Each nanohole then acts as an independent sensor, and the blocking of nanohole optical transmission by enzymatic silver staining defines the specific detection of a biological agent. Nearly 10000 nanoholes can be simultaneously monitored under the field of view of a typical microscope. As an initial proof of concept, biotinylated lysozyme (biotin-HEL) was used as a model analyte, giving a detection limit as low as 0.1 ng/mL.
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