4 resultados para LSPR

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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The research has included the efforts in designing, assembling and structurally and functionally characterizing supramolecular biofunctional architectures for optical biosensing applications. In the first part of the study, a class of interfaces based on the biotin-NeutrAvidin binding matrix for the quantitative control of enzyme surface coverage and activity was developed. Genetically modified ß-lactamase was chosen as a model enzyme and attached to five different types of NeutrAvidin-functionalized chip surfaces through a biotinylated spacer. All matrices are suitable for achieving a controlled enzyme surface density. Data obtained by SPR are in excellent agreement with those derived from optical waveguide measurements. Among the various protein-binding strategies investigated in this study, it was found that stiffness and order between alkanethiol-based SAMs and PEGylated surfaces are very important. Matrix D based on a Nb2O5 coating showed a satisfactory regeneration possibility. The surface-immobilized enzymes were found to be stable and sufficiently active enough for a catalytic activity assay. Many factors, such as the steric crowding effect of surface-attached enzymes, the electrostatic interaction between the negatively charged substrate (Nitrocefin) and the polycationic PLL-g-PEG/PEG-Biotin polymer, mass transport effect, and enzyme orientation, are shown to influence the kinetic parameters of catalytic analysis. Furthermore, a home-built Surface Plasmon Resonance Spectrometer of SPR and a commercial miniature Fiber Optic Absorbance Spectrometer (FOAS), served as a combination set-up for affinity and catalytic biosensor, respectively. The parallel measurements offer the opportunity of on-line activity detection of surface attached enzymes. The immobilized enzyme does not have to be in contact with the catalytic biosensor. The SPR chip can easily be cleaned and used for recycling. Additionally, with regard to the application of FOAS, the integrated SPR technique allows for the quantitative control of the surface density of the enzyme, which is highly relevant for the enzymatic activity. Finally, the miniaturized portable FOAS devices can easily be combined as an add-on device with many other in situ interfacial detection techniques, such as optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy (OWLS), the quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) measurements, or impedance spectroscopy (IS). Surface plasmon field-enhanced fluorescence spectroscopy (SPFS) allows for an absolute determination of intrinsic rate constants describing the true parameters that control interfacial hybridization. Thus it also allows for a study of the difference of the surface coupling influences between OMCVD gold particles and planar metal films presented in the second part. The multilayer growth process was found to proceed similarly to the way it occurs on planar metal substrates. In contrast to planar bulk metal surfaces, metal colloids exhibit a narrow UV-vis absorption band. This absorption band is observed if the incident photon frequency is resonant with the collective oscillation of the conduction electrons and is known as the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR). LSPR excitation results in extremely large molar extinction coefficients, which are due to a combination of both absorption and scattering. When considering metal-enhanced fluorescence we expect the absorption to cause quenching and the scattering to cause enhancement. Our further study will focus on the developing of a detection platform with larger gold particles, which will display a dominant scattering component and enhance the fluorescence signal. Furthermore, the results of sequence-specific detection of DNA hybridization based on OMCVD gold particles provide an excellent application potential for this kind of cheap, simple, and mild preparation protocol applied in this gold fabrication method. In the final chapter, SPFS was used for the in-depth characterizations of the conformational changes of commercial carboxymethyl dextran (CMD) substrate induced by pH and ionic strength variations were studied using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. The pH response of CMD is due to the changes in the electrostatics of the system between its protonated and deprotonated forms, while the ionic strength response is attributed from the charge screening effect of the cations that shield the charge of the carboxyl groups and prevent an efficient electrostatic repulsion. Additional studies were performed using SPFS with the aim of fluorophore labeling the carboxymethyl groups. CMD matrices showed typical pH and ionic strength responses, such as high pH and low ionic strength swelling. Furthermore, the effects of the surface charge and the crosslink density of the CMD matrix on the extent of stimuli responses were investigated. The swelling/collapse ratio decreased with decreasing surface concentration of the carboxyl groups and increasing crosslink density. The study of the CMD responses to external and internal variables will provide valuable background information for practical applications.

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Transportprozesse von anisotropen metallischen Nanopartikeln wie zum Beispiel Gold-Nanostäbchen in komplexen Flüssigkeiten und/oder begrenzten Geometrien spielen eine bedeutende Rolle in einer Vielzahl von biomedizinischen und industriellen Anwendungen. Ein Weg zu einem tiefen, grundlegenden Verständnis von Transportmechanismen ist die Verwendung zweier leistungsstarker Methoden - dynamischer Lichtstreuung (DLS) und resonanzverstärkter Lichtstreuung (REDLS) in der Nähe einer Grenzfläche. In dieser Arbeit wurden nanomolare Suspensionen von Gold-Nanostäbchen, stabilisiert mit Cetyltrimethylammoniumbromid (CTAB), mit DLS sowie in der Nähe einer Grenzfläche mit REDLS untersucht. Mit DLS wurde eine wellenlängenabhängige Verstärkung der anisotropen Streuung beobachtet, welche sich durch die Anregung von longitudinaler Oberflächenplasmonenresonanz ergibt. Die hohe Streuintensität nahe der longitudinalen Oberflächenplasmonenresonanzfrequenz für Stäbchen, welche parallel zum anregenden optischen Feld liegen, erlaubte die Auflösung der translationalen Anisotropie in einem isotropen Medium. Diese wellenlängenabhängige anisotrope Lichtstreuung ermöglicht neue Anwendungen wie etwa die Untersuchung der Dynamik einzelner Partikel in komplexen Umgebungen mittels depolarisierter dynamischer Lichtstreuung. In der Nähe einer Grenzfläche wurde eine starke Verlangsamung der translationalen Diffusion beobachtet. Hingegen zeigte sich für die Rotation zwar eine ausgeprägte aber weniger starke Verlangsamung. Um den möglichen Einfluss von Ladung auf der festen Grenzfläche zu untersuchen, wurde das Metall mit elektrisch neutralem Polymethylmethacrylat (PMMA) beschichtet. In einem weiteren Ansatz wurde das CTAB in der Gold-Nanostäbchen Lösung durch das kovalent gebundene 16-Mercaptohexadecyltrimethylammoniumbromid (MTAB) ersetzt. Daraus ergab sich eine deutlich geringere Verlangsamung.

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This thesis investigates metallic nanostructures exhibiting surface plasmon resonance for the amplification of fluorescence signal in sandwich immunoassays. In this approach, an analyte is captured by an antibody immobilized on a plasmonic structure and detected by a subsequently bound fluorophore labeled detection antibody. The highly confined field of surface plasmons originates from collective charge oscillations which are associated with high electromagnetic field enhancements at the metal surface and allow for greatly increased fluorescence signal from the attached fluorophores. This feature allows for improving the signal-to-noise ratio in fluorescence measurements and thus advancing the sensitivity of the sensor platform. In particular, the thesis presents two plasmonic nanostructures that amplify fluorescence signal in devices that rely on epifluorescence geometry, in which the fluorophore absorbs and emits light from the same direction perpendicular to the substrate surface.rnThe first is a crossed relief gold grating that supports propagating surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) and second, gold nanoparticles embedded in refractive index symmetric environment exhibiting collective localized surface plasmons (cLSPs). Finite-difference time-domain simulations are performed in order to design structures for the optimum amplification of established Cy5 and Alexa Fluor 647 fluorophore labels with the absorption and emission wavelengths in the red region of spectrum. The design takes into account combined effect of surface plasmon-enhanced excitation rate, directional surface plasmon-driven emission and modified quantum yield for characteristic distances in immunoassays. Homebuilt optical instruments are developed for the experimental observation of the surface plasmon mode spectrum, measurements of the angular distribution of surface plasmon-coupled fluorescence light and a setup mimicking commercial fluorescence reading systems in epifluorescence geometry.rnCrossed relief grating structures are prepared by interference lithography and multiple copies are made by UV nanoimprint lithography. The fabricated crossed diffraction gratings were utilized for sandwich immunoassay-based detection of the clinically relevant inflammation marker interleukin 6 (IL-6). The enhancement factor of the crossed grating reached EF=100 when compared to a flat gold substrate. This result is comparable to the highest reported enhancements to date, for fluorophores with relatively high intrinsic quantum yield. The measured enhancement factor excellently agrees with the predictions of the simulations and the mechanisms of the enhancement are explained in detail. Main contributions were the high electric field intensity enhancement (30-fold increase) and the directional fluorescence emission at (4-fold increase) compared to a flat gold substrate.rnCollective localized surface plasmons (cLSPs) hold potential for even stronger fluorescence enhancement of EF=1000, due to higher electric field intensity confinement. cLSPs are established by diffractive coupling of the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of metallic nanoparticles and result in a narrow resonance. Due to the narrow resonance, it is hard to overlap the cLSPs mode with the absorption and emission bands of the used fluorophore, simultaneously. Therefore, a novel two resonance structure that supports SPP and cLSP modes was proposed. It consists of a 2D array of cylindrical gold nanoparticles above a low refractive index polymer and a silver film. A structure that supports the proposed SPP and cLSP modes was prepared by employing laser interference lithography and the measured mode spectrum was compared to simulation results.rn

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Plasmonische Metallnanopartikel bündeln, verstärken und beeinflussen Licht auf nanoskopischer Ebene. Diese grundlegende Eigenschaft kommt von koheränten, kollektiven Schwingungen der Leitungsbandelektronen, die von einfallendem Licht resonant angeregt und lokalisierte Oberflächenplasmonenresonanz (LSPR) oder ‚Partikelplasmonen‘ genannt werden. Plasmonen in Metallnanopartikeln wurden bisher z.B. zur Erkennen von pathogenen Biomolekülen, bei der photothermischen Therapie und zur Verbesserung der Effizienz von Solarzellen verwendet. In dieser Arbeit werde ich meinen Fokus auf die Synthese und Funktionalisierung von Goldnanopartikeln zur Anwendung als Sensoren legen.rnrnKürzliche Verbesserungen in der nasschemischen Synthese haben zur Herstellung von Goldnanopartikel mit unterschiedlichen Formen und Größen geführt, die sich in ihren Sensoreigenschaften unterscheiden. Unter den unterschiedlichen Sensorgeometrien sind Goldnanostäbchen die bevorzugte Form zur Biomolekül-Sensorik durch LSPR. Nanostäbchen werden durch eine positiv geladene CTAB-Schicht stabilisiert, die Proteine bei neutralem pH-Wert anziehen kann. Die Adsorption und Desorption von Proteinen an der Nanopartikeloberfläche und damit die Bindungskinetiken von Proteinen kann auf Einzelmolekülebene erforscht werden. Ich zeige hier eine Studie mit hoher örtlicher und zeitlicher Auflösung um einzelne Bindungsereignisse von Fibronectin auf Goldnanostäbchen darzustellen.rnrnGoldnanostäbchen müssen mit spezifischen biologischen Erkennungselementen funktionalisiert werden um eine Analyterkennung oder Proteinwechselwirkung zu erreichen. Ich funktionalisiere Goldnanostäbchen mit kurzen DNA-Sequenzen (Aptamer-Sequenzen und NTA konjugierten Polihymidinen) und habe anhand diese unterschiedlich sensitiven Partikel eine Studie mit verschiedenen Analyten (oder Protein-Protein Wechselwirkungen) erfolgreich durchgeführt.rn rnPlasmonen von Nanopartikel-Clustern koppeln miteinander, was ihre Resonanzenergie ändert. Der kontrollierte Zusammenbau von Nanopartikeln zu Dimeren oder höher geordneten Strukturen wie ‚Core-Satellites‘ können dazu dienen ihre Sensitivität zu erhöhen. Diese Cluster bieten eine hohe Sensitivität auf Grund der Anwesenheit von plasmonischen Hotspots in der Lücke zwischen zwei Partikeln. Die Plasmonkopplung ist ein Phänomen, das abhängig vom Abstand zweier Partikel zueinander ist und bildet somit die Basis von sogenannten Plasmon-Linealen. Ich habe eine Strategie entwickelt um Dimere aus Hsp90 funktionalisierten Goldnanosphären zu bilden. Diese Technik wird nicht durch Ausbleichen oder das Blinken von Farbstoffen limitiert und ich zeige zum ersten Mal wie man dadurch dynamische Proteinkonformationen untersuchen kann.rn