Recent developments of imaging techniques have enabled fluorescence microscopy to investigate the localization and dynamics of intracellular substances of interest even at the single-molecule level. However, such sensitive detection is often hampered by autofluorescence arising from endogenous molecules. Those unwanted signals are generally reduced by utilizing differences in either wavelength or fluorescence lifetime; nevertheless, extraction of the signal of interest is often insufficient, particularly for in vivo imaging. Here, we describe a potential method for the selective imaging of nitrogen-vacancy centers (NVCs) in nanodiamonds. This method is based on the property of NVCs that the fluorescence intensity sensitively depends on the ground state spin configuration which can be regulated by electron spin magnetic resonance. Because the NVC fluorescence exhibits neither photobleaching nor photoblinking, this protocol allowed us to conduct long-term tracking of a single nanodiamond in both Caenorhabditis elegans and mice, with excellent imaging contrast even in the presence of strong background autofluorescence.
DEER (double electron-electron resonance) enables the observation of long-range dipole interactions (1.5-8 nm) between electron spin centers and has become a unique method for structural analysis of site-directed spin-labeled (SDSL) proteins. The method was applied to proteins inside eukaryotic cells, Xenopus laevis oocytes. DEER measurements of the oocytes, into which SDSL-ubiquitin derivates were injected, gave rise to interpretable signals and allowed us to perform in situ analyses of the interspin distances of the proteins.
Nanoscale measurements provide insight into the nano world. For instance, nanometric spatiotemporal distribution of intracellular pH is regulated by and regulates a variety of biological processes. However, there is no general method to fabricate nanoscale pH sensors. Here, we, to endow pH-sensing functions, tailor the surface properties of a fluorescent nanodiamond (FND) containing nitrogen-vacancy centers (NV centers) by coating the FND with an ionic chemical layer. The longitudinal relaxation time T 1 of the electron spins in the NV centers inside a nanodiamond modified by carboxyl groups on the particle surface was found to depend on ambient pH between pH 3 and pH 7, but not between pH 7 and pH 11. Therefore, a single particle of the carboxylated nanodiamond works as a nanometer-sized pH meter within a microscopic image and directly measures the nanometric local pH environment. Moreover, the pH dependence of an FND was changed by coating it with a polycysteine layer, which contains a multitude of thiol groups with higher pK a. The polycysteine-coated nanodiamond obtained a pH dependence between pH 7 and pH 11. The pH dependence of the FND was also observed in heavy water (D2O) buffers. This indicates that the pH dependence is not caused by magnetic noise induced by 1H nuclear spin fluctuations, but by electric noise induced by ion exchanges. Via our method, the sensitive pH range of the nanodiamond pH sensor can potentially be controlled by changing the ionic layer appropriately according to the target biological phenomena.
Nanodiamonds containing negatively-charged nitrogen-vacancy (NV -) centers are versatile nanosensors thanks to their unique optical and spin properties. While currently most fluorescent nanodiamonds in use have at least a size of a few tens of nanometers, the challenge lies in engineering the smallest size nanodiamonds containing a single NVdefect. Such a tiny nanocrystal with a single NVcenter is an "optical spin label" for biomolecules, which can be detected in a fluorescence microscope. In this paper, we address two key issues towards this goal using detonation nanodiamonds (DND) of 4-5 nm in size. The DND samples are treated first with electron irradiation to create more vacancies. With the aid of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, we confirm a steady increase of negatively-charged NVcenters with higher fluence. This leads to a four times higher concentration in NVdefects after irradiation with 2MeV-electrons at a fluence of 5×10 18 e -/cm 2 . Interestingly, we observe that annealing of DND does not increase the number of NVcenters, which is in contrast to bulk diamond and larger nanodiamonds. Since DND are strongly aggregated after the irradiation process, we apply a boiling acid treatment as a second step to fabricate mono-disperse DND enriched in NVcenters. These are two important steps towards "optical spin labels" having single digit nanometer range size that could be used for bioimaging and nanosensing.
The rotation of an object cannot be fully tracked without understanding a set of three angles, namely, roll, pitch, and yaw. Tracking these angles as a three-degrees-of-freedom (3-DoF) rotation is a fundamental measurement, facilitating, for example, attitude control of a ship, image stabilization to reduce camera shake, and self-driving cars. Until now, however, there has been no method to track 3-DoF rotation to measure nanometer-scale dynamics in biomolecules and live cells. Here we show that 3-DoF rotation of biomolecules can be visualized via nitrogen-vacancy centers in a fluorescent nanodiamond using a tomographic vector magnetometry technique. We demonstrate application of the method to three different types of biological systems. First, we tracked the rotation of a single molecule of the motor protein F1-ATPase by attaching a nanodiamond to the γ-subunit. We visualized the 3-step rotation of the motor in 3D space and, moreover, a delay of ATP binding or ADP release step in the catalytic reaction. Second, we attached a nanodiamond to a membrane protein in live cells to report on cellular membrane dynamics, showing that 3D rotational motion of the membrane protein correlates with intracellular cytoskeletal density. Last, we used the method to track nonrandom motions in the intestine of Caenorhabditis elegans. Collectively, our findings show that the method can record nanoscale 3-DoF rotation in vitro, in cells, and even in vivo. 3-DoF rotation tracking introduces a new perspective on microscopic biological samples, revealing in greater detail the functional mechanisms due to nanoscale dynamics in molecules and cells.
Fluorescent nanodiamonds (FNDs) have been attracting much attention as promising therapeutic agents and probes for bioimaging and nanosensing. For their biological applications, several hydrophilizing methods to enhance FND colloidal stability have been developed to suppress their aggregation and the nonspecific adsorption to biomolecules in complex biomedical environments. However, these methods involve several complicated synthetic and purification steps, which prohibit the use of FNDs for bioapplications by biologists. In this study, we describe a simple one-pot FND hydrophilization method that comprises coating of the surface of the nanoparticles with COOH-terminated hyperbranched polyglycerol (HPG-COOH). HPG-COOH-coated FNDs (FND-HPG-COOHs) were found to exhibit excellent dispersibility under physiological conditions despite the thinness of the 5 nm HPG-COOH layer. Biotinylated FND-HPG-COOHs specifically captured avidin molecules in the absence of nonspecific protein adsorption. Moreover, we demonstrated that FND-HPG-COOHs conjugated with antibodies can be used to selectively target integrins in fixed HeLa cells. In addition, intracellular temperature changes were measured via optically detected magnetic resonance using FND-HPG-COOHs conjugated with mitochondrial localization signal peptides. Our one-pot synthetic method will encourage the broad use of FNDs among molecular and cellular biologists and pave the way for extensive biological and biomedical applications of FNDs.
We developed a novel magnetometer that employs negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy (nV −) centers in diamond, to detect the magnetic field generated by magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) for biomedical applications. The compact probe system is integrated into a fiber-optics platform allowing for a compact design. To detect signals from the MNPs effectively, we demonstrated, for the first time, the application of an alternating current (AC) magnetic field generated by the excitation coil of several hundred microteslas for the magnetization of Mnps in diamond quantum sensing. in the lock-in detection system, the minimum detectable AC magnetic field (at a frequency of 1.025 kHz) was approximately 57.6 nT for one second measurement time. We were able to detect the micromolar concentration of Mnps at distances of a few millimeters. these results indicate that the magnetometer with the nV − centers can detect the tiny amounts of MNPs, thereby offering potential for future biomedical applications.
The development of sensors to estimate physical properties, and their temporal and spatial variation, has been a central driving force in scientific breakthroughs. In recent years, nanosensors based on quantum measurements, such as nitrogen-vacancy centres (NVCs) in nanodiamonds, have been attracting much attention as ultrastable, sensitive, accurate and versatile physical sensors for quantitative cellular measurements. However, the nanodiamonds currently available for use as sensors have diameters of several tens of nanometres, much larger than the usual size of a protein. Therefore, their actual applications remain limited. Here we show that NVCs in an aggregation of 5-nm-sized detonation-synthesized nanodiamond treated by Krüger’s surface reduction (termed DND-OH) retains the same characteristics as observed in larger diamonds. We show that the negative charge at the NVC are stabilized, have a relatively long T2 spin relaxation time of up to 4 μs, and are applicable to thermosensing, one-degree orientation determination and nanometric super-resolution imaging. Our results clearly demonstrate the significant potential of DND-OH as a physical sensor. Thus, DND-OH will raise new possibilities for spatiotemporal monitoring of live cells and dynamic biomolecules in individual cells at single-molecule resolution.
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