3 research outputs found

    Aligned silver nanowires for plasmonically-enhanced fluorescence detection of photoactive proteins in wet and dry environment

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    We developed a method of aligning silver nanowires in a microchannel and fixing them to glass substrates via appropriate functionalization. The attachment of nanowires to the substrate is robust with no variation of their angles over minutes. Specific conjugation with photoactive proteins is observed using wide-field fluorescence imaging in real-time for highly concentrated protein solution, both in a microchannel and in a chip geometry. In the latter case we can detect the presence of the proteins in the dropcasted solution down to single proteins. The results point towards possible implementation of aligned silver nanowires as geometrically defined plasmonic fluorescence sensing platform

    Wide-Field Fluorescence Microscopy of Real-Time Bioconjugation Sensing

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    We apply wide-field fluorescence microscopy to measure real-time attachment of photosynthetic proteins to plasmonically active silver nanowires. The observation of this effect is enabled, on the one hand, by sensitive detection of fluorescence and, on the other hand, by plasmonic enhancement of protein fluorescence. We examined two sample configurations with substrates being a bare glass coverslip and a coverslip functionalized with a monolayer of streptavidin. The different preparation of the substrate changes the observed behavior as far as attachment of the protein is concerned as well as its subsequent photobleaching. For the latter substrate the conjugation process is measurably slower. The described method can be universally applied in studying protein-nanostructure interactions for real-time fluorescence-based sensing
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