3 research outputs found
High Sensitivity and High Detection Specificity of Gold-Nanoparticle-Grafted Nanostructured Silicon Mass Spectrometry for Glucose Analysis
Desorption/ionization on silicon
(DIOS) is a high-performance matrix-free
mass spectrometry (MS) analysis method that involves using silicon
nanostructures as a matrix for MS desorption/ionization. In this study,
gold nanoparticles grafted onto a nanostructured silicon (AuNPs-nSi)
surface were demonstrated as a DIOS-MS analysis approach with high
sensitivity and high detection specificity for glucose detection.
A glucose sample deposited on the AuNPs-nSi surface was directly catalyzed
to negatively charged gluconic acid molecules on a single AuNPs-nSi
chip for MS analysis. The AuNPs-nSi surface was fabricated using two
electroless deposition steps and one electroless etching step. The
effects of the electroless fabrication parameters on the glucose detection
efficiency were evaluated. Practical application of AuNPs-nSi MS glucose
analysis in urine samples was also demonstrated in this study
Exploration of Fungal Metabolic Interactions Using Imaging Mass Spectrometry on Nanostructured Silicon
Application of matrix-assisted laser
desorption/ionization imaging mass spectrometry to microbiology and
natural product research has opened the door to the exploration of
microbial interactions and the consequent discovery of new natural
products and their functions in the interactions. However, several
drawbacks of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization imaging mass
spectrometry have limited its application especially to complicated
and uneven microbial samples. Here, we applied nanostructured silicon
as a substrate for surface-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass
spectrometry for microbial imaging mass spectrometry to explore fungal
metabolic interactions. We chose <i>Phellinus noxius</i> and <i>Aspergillus</i> strains to evaluate the potential
of microbial imaging mass spectrometry on nanostructured silicon because
both fungi produce a dense mass of aerial mycelia, which is known
to complicate the collection of high-quality imaging mass spectrometry
data. Our simple and straightforward sample imprinting method and
low background interference resulted in an efficient analysis of small
metabolites from the complex microbial interaction samples
Exploration of Fungal Metabolic Interactions Using Imaging Mass Spectrometry on Nanostructured Silicon
Application of matrix-assisted laser
desorption/ionization imaging mass spectrometry to microbiology and
natural product research has opened the door to the exploration of
microbial interactions and the consequent discovery of new natural
products and their functions in the interactions. However, several
drawbacks of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization imaging mass
spectrometry have limited its application especially to complicated
and uneven microbial samples. Here, we applied nanostructured silicon
as a substrate for surface-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass
spectrometry for microbial imaging mass spectrometry to explore fungal
metabolic interactions. We chose <i>Phellinus noxius</i> and <i>Aspergillus</i> strains to evaluate the potential
of microbial imaging mass spectrometry on nanostructured silicon because
both fungi produce a dense mass of aerial mycelia, which is known
to complicate the collection of high-quality imaging mass spectrometry
data. Our simple and straightforward sample imprinting method and
low background interference resulted in an efficient analysis of small
metabolites from the complex microbial interaction samples