Controlled reduction of photobleaching in DNA origami-gold nanoparticle hybrids.

NANO LETTERS(2014)

Cited 63|Views20
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Abstract
The amount of information obtainable from a fluorescence-based measurement is limited by photobleaching: Irreversible photochemical reactions either render the molecules non-fluorescent or shift their absorption and/or emission spectra outside the working range. Photobleaching is evidenced as a decrease of fluorescence intensity with time, or in the case of single molecule measurements, as an abrupt, single-step interruption of the fluorescence emission that determines the end of the experiment. Reducing photobleaching is central for improving fluorescence (functional) imaging, single molecule tracking, and fluorescence-based biosensors and assays. In this single molecule study, we use DNA self-assembly to produce hybrid nanostructures containing individual fluorophores and gold nanoparticles at a controlled separation distance of 8.5 nm. By changing the nanoparticles' size we are able to systematically increase the mean number of photons emitted by the fluorophores before photobleaching.
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Key words
DNA self-assembly,single-molecule,photobleaching,plasmonics,gold nanoparticle
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