Antiphase
Dual-Color Correlation in a Reactant–Product Pair Imparts Ultrasensitivity
in Reaction-Linked Double-Photoswitching Fluorescence Imaging
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
A pair of reversible
photochemical reactions correlates their reactant and product specifically,
and such a correlation uniquely distinguishes their correlated signal
from others that are not linked by this reversible reaction. Here
a nanoparticle-shielded fluorophore is photodriven to undergo structural
dynamics, alternating between a green-fluorescence state and a red-fluorescence
state. As time elapses, the fluorophore can be in either state but
not both at the same time. Thus, the red fluorescence is maximized
while the green fluorescence is minimized and vice versa. Such an
antiphase dual-color (AD) corelationship between the red and green
fluorescence maxima as well as between their minima can be exploited
to greatly improve the signal-to-noise ratio, thus enhancing the ultimate
detection limit. Potential benefits of this correlation include elimination
of all interferences originating from single-color dyes and signal
amplification of AD photoswitching molecules by orders of magnitude