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Colloidal Au-Enhanced Surface Plasmon Resonance Immunosensing

610

Citations

43

References

1998

Year

TLDR

The study reports a colloidal gold–enhanced surface plasmon resonance biosensing approach. The colloidal Au–enhanced SPR platform yields a large plasmon angle shift, broadened resonance, higher reflectance, and 25‑fold signal amplification, enabling picomolar detection of IgG and a quasi‑linear correlation between particle coverage and antigen concentration, thereby markedly improving sensitivity for protein–protein interactions.

Abstract

Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensing using colloidal Au enhancement is reported. Immobilization of approximately 11-nm-diameter colloidal Au to an evaporated Au film results in a large shift in plasmon angle, a broadened plasmon resonance, and an increase in minimum reflectance. The incorporation of colloidal Au into SPR biosensing results in increased SPR sensitivity to protein-protein interactions when a Au film-immobilized antibody and an antigen-colloidal Au conjugate comprise the binding pair. A highly specific particle-enhanced analogue of a sandwich immunoassay is also demonstrated by complexing the Au particle to a secondary antibody. A tremendous signal amplification is observed, as addition of the antibody-Au colloid conjugate results in a 25-fold larger signal than that due to addition of a free antibody solution that is 6 orders of magnitude more concentrated. Picomolar detection of human immunoglobulin G has been realized using particle enhancement, with the theoretical limits for the technique being much lower. Finally, a quasi-linear relationship between particle coverage and plasmon angle shift is presented, thereby providing for a direct correlation between plasmon shift and solution antigen concentration. Together, these results represent significant advances in the generality and sensitivity of SPR as it is applied to biosensing.

References

YearCitations

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