In this article we show that linear nanoantennas can be used as shared substrates for surface-enhanced Raman and infrared spectroscopy (SERS and SEIRS, respectively). This is done by engineering the plasmonic properties of the nanoantennas, so to make them resonant in both the visible (transversal resonance) and the infrared (longitudinal resonance), and by rotating the excitation field polarization to selectively take advantage of each resonance and achieve SERS and SEIRS on the same nanoantennas. As a proof of concept, we have fabricated gold nanoantennas by electron beam lithography on calcium difluoride (1-2 μm long, 60 nm wide, 60 nm high) that exhibit a transverse plasmonic resonance in the visible (640 nm) and a particularly strong longitudinal dipolar resonance in the infrared (tunable in the 1280-3100 cm(-1) energy range as a function of the length). SERS and SEIRS detection of methylene blue molecules adsorbed on the nanoantenna's surface is accomplished, with signal enhancement factors of 5×10(2) for SERS (electromagnetic enhancement) and up to 10(5) for SEIRS. Notably, we find that the field enhancement provided by the transverse resonance is sufficient to achieve SERS from single nanoantennas. Furthermore, we show that by properly tuning the nanoantenna length the signals of a multitude of vibrational modes can be enhanced with SEIRS. This simple concept of plasmonic nanosensor is highly suitable for integration on lab-on-a-chip schemes for label-free chemical and biomolecular identification with optimized performances.
Strategies for in-liquid molecular detection via Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) are currently based on chemically-driven aggregation or optical trapping of metal nanoparticles in presence of the target molecules. Such strategies allow the formation of SERS-active clusters that efficiently embed the molecule at the “hot spots” of the nanoparticles and enhance its Raman scattering by orders of magnitude. Here we report on a novel scheme that exploits the radiation pressure to locally push gold nanorods and induce their aggregation in buffered solutions of biomolecules, achieving biomolecular SERS detection at almost neutral pH. The sensor is applied to detect non-resonant amino acids and proteins, namely Phenylalanine (Phe), Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) and Lysozyme (Lys), reaching detection limits in the μg/mL range. Being a chemical free and contactless technique, our methodology is easy to implement, fast to operate, needs small sample volumes and has potential for integration in microfluidic circuits for biomarkers detection.
We explore the effect of re-radiation in surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) through polarization-sensitive experiments on self-organized gold nanowires on which randomly oriented Methylene Blue molecules are adsorbed. We provide the exact laws ruling the polarized, unpolarized, and parallel- and cross-polarized SERS intensity as a function of the field polarizations. We show that SERS is polarized along the wire-to-wire nanocavity axis, independently from the excitation polarization. This proves the selective enhancement of the Raman dipole component parallel to the nanocavity at the single molecule level. Introducing a field enhancement tensor to account for the anisotropic polarization response of the nanowires, we work out a model that correctly predicts the experimental results for any excitation/detection polarization and goes beyond the E(4) approximation. We also show how polarization-sensitive SERS experiments permit one to evaluate independently the excitation and the re-radiation enhancement factors accessing the orientation-averaged non-diagonal components of the molecular Raman polarizability tensor.
Objectives: Currently, the exact reasons why different α-synucleinopathies exhibit variable pathologies and phenotypes are still unknown. A potential explanation may be the existence of distinctive α-synuclein conformers or strains. Here, we intend to analyze the seeding activity of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Parkinson's disease (PD) brain-derived α-synuclein seeds by real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) and to investigate the structure and morphology of the α-synuclein aggregates generated by RT-QuIC. Methods: A misfolded α-synuclein-enriched brain fraction from frontal cortex and substantia nigra pars compacta tissue, isolated by several filtration and centrifugation steps, was subjected to α-synuclein/RT-QuIC analysis. Our study included neuropathologically well-characterized cases with DLB, PD, and controls (Ctrl). Biochemical and morphological analyses of RT-QuIC products were conducted by western blot, dot blot analysis, Raman spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. Results: Independently from the brain region, we observed different seeding kinetics of α-synuclein in the RT-QuIC in patients with DLB compared to PD and Ctrl. Biochemical characterization of the RT-QuIC product indicated the generation of a proteinase K-resistant and fibrillary α-synuclein species in DLB-seeded reactions, whereas PD and control seeds failed in the conversion of wild-type α-synuclein substrate. Interpretation: Structural variances of α-synuclein seeding kinetics and products in DLB and PD indicated, for the first time, the existence of different α-synuclein strains in these groups. Therefore, our study contributes to a better understanding of the clinical heterogeneity among α-synucleinopathies, offers an opportunity for a specific diagnosis, and opens new avenues for the future development of strain-specific therapies. ANN NEUROL 2019;85:691-703 S ynucleinopathies, such as Parkinson's disease (PD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), are a class of neurodegenerative diseases characterized by the presence of insoluble intraneural deposits consisting of fibrillary α-synuclein, 1,2 referred to as Lewy bodies. A PD with dementia (PDD) diagnosis is appropriate when the cognitive symptoms View this article online at wileyonlinelibrary.com.
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