Light-Harvesting Nanoparticle Probes for FRET-Based Detection of Oligonucleotides with Single-Molecule Sensitivity.
Nina MelnychukSylvie EgloffAnne RunserAndreas ReischAndrey S KlymchenkoPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Controlling the emission of bright luminescent nanoparticles by a single molecular recognition event remains a challenge in the design of ultrasensitive probes for biomolecules. Herein, we developed 20-nm light-harvesting nanoantenna particles, built of a tailor-made hydrophobic charged polymer poly(ethyl methacrylate-co-methacrylic acid), encapsulating circa 1000 strongly coupled and highly emissive rhodamine dyes with their bulky counterion. Being 87-fold brighter than quantum dots QDots 605 in single-particle microscopy (with 550-nm excitation), these DNA-functionalized nanoparticles exhibit over 50 % total FRET efficiency to a single hybridized FRET acceptor, a highly photostable dye (ATTO665), leading to circa 250-fold signal amplification. The obtained FRET nanoprobes enable single-molecule detection of short DNA and RNA sequences, encoding a cancer marker (survivin), and imaging single hybridization events by an epi-fluorescence microscope with ultralow excitation irradiance close to that of ambient sunlight.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- energy transfer
- quantum dots
- living cells
- label free
- sensitive detection
- nucleic acid
- atomic force microscopy
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- photodynamic therapy
- light emitting
- ionic liquid
- high resolution
- air pollution
- papillary thyroid
- aqueous solution
- gold nanoparticles
- squamous cell carcinoma
- circulating tumor
- fluorescent probe
- squamous cell
- high speed
- metal organic framework
- circulating tumor cells