Publication | Closed Access
Properties of Fluorescent Semiconductor Nanocrystals and their Application to Biological Labeling
366
Citations
89
References
2001
Year
NanoparticlesEngineeringFluorescent Semiconductor NanocrystalsColloidal NanocrystalsChemistryPhosphorescence ImagingBiological LabelingBioimagingSingle MoleculeThermally Activated Delayed FluorescenceRecent AdvancesMolecular ImagingBiophysicsNanotechnologyNanobiotechnologyPhotonic MaterialsFluorescence ImagingNanocrystalline MaterialSingle-molecule DetectionBiomolecular EngineeringFluorescence MicroscopyBiomedical DiagnosticsNanofabricationFluorescent Tagging
We review recent advances in the development of colloidal fluorescent semiconductor nanocrystals (a class of quantum dots) for biological labeling. Although some of the photophysical properties of nanocrystals are not fully understood and are still actively investigated, researchers have begun developing bioconjugation schemes and applying such probes to biological assays. Nanocrystals possess several qualities that make them very attractive for fluorescent tagging: broad excitation spectrum, narrow emission spectrum, precise tunability of their emission peak, longer fluorescence lifetime than organic fluorophores and negligible photobleaching. On the down side, their emission is strongly intermittent (“blinking”) and their size is relatively large for many biological uses. We describe how to take advantage of nanocrystals' spectral properties to increase the resolution of fluorescence microscopy measurements down to the nanometer level. We also show how their long fluorescence lifetime can be used to observe molecules and organelles in living cells without interference from background autofluorescence, a pre-requisite for single molecule detectability. Finally, their availability in multicolor species and their single molecule sensitivity open up interesting possibilities for genomics applications.
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