Department meeting: Prof. Wolfgang Fritzsche

-
Department meeting, scientific lectures

Dear Colleague, 

I inform you that there will be the Department discussion on Tuesday, 12th April, 2022 from 08:30 in the LSB F003-004 lecture hall.
Professor Panyi urges that EVERYONE can appear, however if you can't come please send me an email to biophys@med.unideb.hu          . 

 

The lecturer is   Prof. Wolfgang Fritzsche (Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology (IPHT), Jena, Germany), title: "Bioanalytics using plasmonic nanostructures"

 

Abstract:

Today, innovative tools for diagnostics and bioanalytics are needed, to be usable outside of dedicated laboratories and with less qualified personnel, at minimal costs.  

Plasmonic nanostructures promise to provide sensing capabilities with the potential for ultrasensitive and robust assays in a high parallelization and miniaturization, and without the need for markers. Upon binding of molecules, the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of these structures is changed, and can be used as sensoric readout [1]. This is possible even on a single nanostructure level, using optical darkfield detection introduced more than 100 years ago [2], as demonstrated for DNA detection [3]. In contrast to SPR, LSPR senses only in a very thin layer (on the scale of the particle diameter), resulting in an efficient background suppression [4].

In order to multiplex this approach, an imaging spectrometer based on a Michelson interferometer has been developed, able to readout a whole array of sensors in one step [5]. On the sensor side, microarrays of gold nanoparticle spots were fabricated using spotting of pre-synthesized gold nanoparticles [6]. Such chemically synthesized particles allow for a cost-efficient generation of highly crystalline particles as nanosensors; by using microfluidic approaches, a higher quality and reproducibility can be achieved [7]. Using this microarray approach, a multiplex DNA-based detection of fungal pathogens involved in sepsis could be demonstrated [8]. DNA-based signal amplification, such as hybridization chain reaction, improves the sensitivity [9]. Beyond DNA detection, LSPR sensing is also applicable for the detection of protein targets, such as CRP [10]. 

References
[1]    Philosophical Transactions A 369, 3483 (2011).
[2]    Angew Chem Int Ed 51, 11208 (2012)
[3]    J Nanopart Res 15, 1531 (2013)    
[4]    Sensing and BioSensing Research 7, 62 (2016)
[5]    Biosensors and Bioelectronics 81, 287 (2016)
[6]    Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 411, 1537 (2019)
[7]    Chemical Engineering Journal 288 432 (2016)
[8]    ACS Sensors 4, 335 (2019)
[9]    Biosensors and Bioelectronics 167, 112465 (2020)
[10]    Scientific Reports 12, 836 (2022)

 

 

 

Abstract: debrecen_2022_fritzsche_1.doc

Last update: 2023. 06. 26. 09:27