This Science News Wire page contains a press release issued by an organization and is provided to you "as is" with little or no review from Science X staff.

Ultraviolet Nanophotonics drives the spectroscopy of label-free proteins to the ultimate sensitivity

January 10th, 2023 Dr. Jerome Wenger, Institut Fresnel, Aix Marseille University
Ultraviolet Nanophotonics drives the spectroscopy of label-free proteins to the ultimate sensitivity
Scheme to enhance signal and signal-to-noise ratio which enables us to see a single molecule with single tryptophan.

Proteins are naturally fluorescent in the ultraviolet, offering an appealing approach to probe proteins in their native state without introducing any external fluorescent label. The UV autofluorescence of proteins is based on the presence of tryptophan amino acids, which typically occur as 1 to 5 tryptophan per protein. However, due to weak signals and large backgrounds in the UV, the current technology was restricted to large proteins featuring several tens of tryptophan residues. The vast majority of proteins remained well below the detection sensitivity for single-label-free protein detection.

In a recent Nano Letters publication, our team breaks into this sensitivity limit and achieves label-free UV-autofluorescence detection down to the single tryptophan level thanks to a nanophotonic enhancement of the signal. Our approach relies on a rationally-designed combination of plasmonic antennas, antioxidants, and background noise reduction techniques to improve the signal-to-background ratio by over an order of magnitude. Achieving the ultimate sensitivity of UV-FCS down to the single tryptophan regime has wide applications for various communities from nanophotonics to biochemistry. We conclusively demonstrate UV-fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (UV-FCS) on proteins with a single tryptophan residue. This unlocks the applicability of UV-FCS to a broad library of thousands of proteins, which remained previously inaccessible (over 90% of human proteins have at least one tryptophan residue, but only 4% have more than 20 tryptophans). Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) and related techniques have a large impact on molecular biophysics in assessing diffusion properties, local concentrations, or kinetic reaction rates.

The signal-to-background maximization approach is of interest to a wide range of scientists and engineers working with single-molecule fluorescence, photonics, or plasmonics. Our article details several multidisciplinary aspects: (i) plasmonic nanophotonic elements to enhance the fluorescence, (ii) antioxidants to neutralize the reactive oxygen species ubiquitous to ultraviolet, and (iii) background suppression based on a rational understanding of the background physical origins.

A basic introduction to our work on UV-based auto-fluorescence spectroscopy. Credit: © CNRS Institut Fresnel, courtsey of Science animated.

For more detailed reading refer to the published article "Ultraviolet Nanophotonics Enables Autofluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy on Label-Free Proteins with a Single Tryptophan"- Prithu Roy, Jean-Benoît Claude, Sunny Tiwari, Aleksandr Barulin, and Jérôme Wenger

Ultraviolet Nanophotonics drives the spectroscopy of label-free proteins to the ultimate sensitivity
Figure of content. Credit: Aix-Marseille University

More information:
Prithu Roy et al, Ultraviolet Nanophotonics Enables Autofluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy on Label-Free Proteins with a Single Tryptophan, Nano Letters (2023). DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c03797 , pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c03797

1.Lakowicz, J. R. Principles of Fluorescence Spectroscopy, 3rd ed.; Springer US, 2006; pp 529– 575.

2.Arroyo, J. O.; Kukura, P. Non-Fluorescent Schemes for Single-Molecule Detection, Imaging and Spectroscopy. Nat. Photonics 2016, 10, 11– 17, DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2015.251

3.Li, Q.; Seeger, S. Label-Free Detection of Protein Interactions Using Deep UV Fluorescence Lifetime Microscopy. Anal. Biochem. 2007, 367, 104– 110, DOI: 10.1016/j.ab.2007.04.050

4.Barulin, A.; Claude, J.-B.; Patra, S.; Bonod, N.; Wenger, J. Deep Ultraviolet Plasmonic Enhancement of Single Protein Autofluorescence in Zero-Mode Waveguides. Nano Lett. 2019, 19, 7434– 7442, DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b03137

Provided by Aix-Marseille University

Citation: Ultraviolet Nanophotonics drives the spectroscopy of label-free proteins to the ultimate sensitivity (2023, January 10) retrieved 18 November 2024 from https://sciencex.com/wire-news/434788132/ultraviolet-nanophotonics-drives-the-spectroscopy-of-label-free.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.