2 research outputs found
Spectroscopy of Single CdSe Nanoplatelets
We collect and resolve spectrally and temporally the photoluminescence of single CdSe nanoplatelets. The emission intensity of single nanoplatelets at room temperature shows ON and OFF periods with a usual blinking statistics, while at 20 K, their emission intensity can be extremely stable in time. At room temperature, the emission spectra of single nanoplatelets are similar to ensemble measurements with a full width at half-maximum of 40 meV. At 20 K, we obtain a resolution-limited spectral line width (<0.4 meV). The fluorescence lifetime of single nanoplatelets decreases when the temperature decreases to reach 200 ps at 20 K. This lifetime shortening is concomitant with an increase of the nanoplateletsâ emission intensity
Oriented Bioconjugation of Unmodified Antibodies to Quantum Dots Capped with Copolymeric Ligands as Versatile Cellular Imaging Tools
Distinctive optical properties of
inorganic quantum dot (QD) nanoparticles promise highly valuable probes
for fluorescence-based detection methods, particularly for in vivo
diagnostics, cell phenotyping via multiple markers or single molecule
tracking. However, despite high hopes, this promise has not been fully
realized yet, mainly due to difficulties at producing stable, nontoxic
QD bioconjugates of negligible nonspecific binding. Here, a universal
platform for antibody binding to QDs is presented that builds upon
the controlled functionalization of CdSe/CdS/ZnS nanoparticles capped
with a multidentate dithiol/zwitterion copolymer ligand. In a change-of-paradigm
approach, thiol groups are concomitantly used as anchoring and bioconjugation
units to covalently bind up to 10 protein A molecules per QD while
preserving their long-term colloidal stability. Protein A conjugated
to QDs then enables the oriented, stoichiometrically controlled immobilization
of whole, unmodified antibodies by simple incubation. This QDâprotein
A immobilization platform displays remarkable antibody functionality
retention after binding, usually a compromised property in antibody
conjugation to surfaces. Typical QDâprotein Aâantibody
assemblies contain about three fully functional antibodies. Validation
experiments show that these nanobioconjugates overcome current limitations
since they retain their colloidal stability and antibody functionality
over 6 months, exhibit low nonspecific interactions with live cells
and have very low toxicity: after 48 h incubation with 1 ÎŒM
QD bioconjugates, HeLa cells retain more than 80% of their cellular
metabolism. Finally, these QD nanobioconjugates possess a high specificity
for extra- and intracellular targets in live and fixed cells. The
dithiol/zwitterion QDâprotein A nanoconjugates have thus a
latent potential to become an off-the-shelf tool destined to unresolved
biological questions