Optical super-resolution imaging has gained momentum in investigations of heterogeneous and homogeneous chemical reactions at the single-molecule level. Thanks to its exceptional spatial resolution and ability to monitor dynamic systems, much detailed information on single-molecule reaction/adsorption processes and single-particle catalytic processes has been revealed, including chemical kinetics and reaction dynamics; active-site distributions on single-particle surfaces; and size-, shape-, and facet-dependent catalytic activities of individual nanocatalysts. In this review, we provide an overview of recent advances in super-resolution chemical imaging of surface reactions.
We present a high-throughput strategy for sensitive detection of H2S by using individual spherical Au-Ag core-shell plasmonic nanoparticles (PNPs) as molecular probes. This method is based on quantification of color variation of the single PNPs resulting from formation of Ag2S on the particle surface. The spectral response range of the 51 nm PNP was specifically designed to match the most sensitive region of color cameras. A high density of immobilized PNPs and rapid color RGB (red/green/blue) analysis allow a large number of individual PNPs to be monitored simultaneously, leading to reliable quantification of color change of the PNPs. A linear logarithmic dependence on sulfide concentrations from 50 nM to 100 μM was demonstrated by using this colorimetric assay. By designing PNPs with various surface chemistries, similar strategies could be developed to detect other chemically or biologically important molecules.
Real time observation of chemical reactions of individual noble metal nanoparticles (MNPs) is fundamentally important to their controlled synthesis, chemical sensing and catalysis applications. Here, with a simple and high-throughput single-molecule darkfield spectral imaging technique, we demonstrate that the reaction-induced plasmonic resonance variations of multiple MNPs could be monitored in parallel. Oxidation kinetics of individual gold nanorods (AuNRs), either immobilized on a glass substrate or moving freely in homogeneous solution, was recorded successfully. Heterogeneous reaction pathways and intermediate states unobservable in ensemble UV-visible measurements were revealed. Interestingly, the oxidation rate of individual immobilized AuNRs was much slower than that of the bulk AuNR solution, which implies the existence of a novel self-catalysis mechanism. This high-throughput darkfield spectral imaging technique could be applied to chemical reaction kinetics and heterogeneous catalysis studies of other MNPs at single particle level.
Herein, we demonstrated a new optical microscopy method to selectively image small-size gold nanoparticles (GNPs) inside noisy living cells through determination of the difference image between the probe beam (illuminated at the resonance wavelength of GNPs, 532 nm) and the reference beam (illuminated at 473 nm). From computer simulation and single-particle imaging experiments, we demonstrated that GNPs with a diameter of 45 nm could be selectively imaged in the GNPs/cell lysates mixture and inside living cells by dual-wavelength difference (DWD) imaging. The diffusion dynamics of nucleic acids functionalized GNPs on cell membranes and the internalization kinetics of these GNPs by living cells were explored with this method. Our real-time tracking experiments showed that statistically 80% of GNPs were under restricted diffusion on the cell membrane. The cell cytoskeleton fence effect, as observed in the single-particle tracking experiments, may be one of the main factors for the restricted diffusion mode.
Dynamin plays an important role in clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) by cutting the neck of nascent vesicles from the cell membrane. Here through using gold nanorods as cargos to image dynamin action during live CME, we show that near the peak of dynamin accumulation, the cargo-containing vesicles always exhibit abrupt, right-handed rotations that finish in a short time (~0.28 s). The large and quick twist, herein named the super twist, is the result of the coordinated dynamin helix action upon GTP hydrolysis. After the super twist, the rotational freedom of the vesicle drastically increases, accompanied with simultaneous or delayed translational movement, indicating that it detaches from the cell membrane. These observations suggest that dynamin-mediated scission involves a large torque generated by coordinated actions of multiple dynamins in the helix, which is the main driving force for vesicle scission.
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