Reducing Background Contributions in Fluorescence Fluctuation Time- Traces for Single-Molecule Measurements in Solution
Author(s) -
Zeno FöldesPapp,
Shih-Chu Jeff Liao,
Tiefeng You,
Beniamino Barbieri
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
current pharmaceutical biotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.555
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1873-4316
pISSN - 1389-2010
DOI - 10.2174/138920109788922137
Subject(s) - analyte , fluorescence , gating , shutter , signal (programming language) , chemistry , amplitude , electrokinetic phenomena , analytical chemistry (journal) , optics , materials science , nanotechnology , physics , computer science , biophysics , chromatography , biology , programming language
We first report on the development of new microscope means that reduce background contributions in fluorescence fluctuation methods: i) excitation shutter, ii) electronic switches, and iii) early and late time-gating. The elements allow for measuring molecules at low analyte concentrations. We first found conditions of early and late time-gating with time-correlated single-photon counting that made the fluorescence signal as bright as possible compared with the fluctuations in the background count rate in a diffraction-limited optical set-up. We measured about a 140-fold increase in the amplitude of autocorrelated fluorescence fluctuations at the lowest analyte concentration of about 15 pM, which gave a signal-to-background advantage of more than two-orders of magnitude. The results of this original article pave the way for single-molecule detection in solution and in live cells without immobilization or hydrodynamic/electrokinetic focusing at longer observation times than are currently available.
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