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Fluorescence Sensing

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Rapid low cost testing clinical, bioprocess, environmental applications ... Measurements need to be made in non-cuvette systems ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fluorescence Sensing


1
Fluorescence Sensing
  • Chapter 19

2
Introduction
  • Sensing of chemical and biochemical analytes
  • Rapid low cost testing clinical, bioprocess,
    environmental applications
  • Examples DNA sequencing, DNA fragment analysis,
    fluorescence immunoassays
  • Absorbance comparison to reference beam
  • Fluorescence - directly measured
    concentrations - 10-10 M

3
Optical Clinical Chemistry
  • Biological sample - Measure analyte
    concentrations in real time
  • Point of care instruments LED light sources,
    fluorescence intensity, polarization, lifetime
  • Photolithorgraphic methods arrays of DNA
    sequences or proteins two dimensional surface
  • Point-of-care testing immediate answer

4
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5
Spectral Observables
  • Fluorescence property changes in response to
    analyte intensity, ex. or em., anisotropy, or
    lifetime
  • Intensity difficult to use as a sensor
  • Fluororphore concentrations
  • Photobleaching
  • Methods independent of fluorophore concentration
  • wavelength ratiometric probes
  • Anisotropy
  • Lifetime
  • Phase modulation

6
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7
Optical Properties of Tissues
  • Water and tissues
  • Tissues lower for longer wavelengths
    hemoglobin, melanin absorption decreases
  • Absorption of water increases above 1000 nm
  • Region of 600-1000 nm solid state lasers can be
    used in this range

8
Lifetime-Based Sensing
  • Measurements need to be made in non-cuvette
    systems
  • Scattering properties of syringe or medical
    device
  • Independent of intensity

9
Mechanisms of Sensing
  • Collisional quenching analyte directly quenches
    the fluorophore change in lifetime or intensity
  • Energy transfer - protein-protein associations,
    immunoassays, pH change in acceptor absorbance
    results in change in donor due to FRET

10
  • pH probes equilibrium between ionized and
    non-ionized
  • Cation binding probes photoinduced electron
    transfer (PET) exciplex formation quenching,
    removed when zinc binds
  • Polarization Changes - immunoassays

11
Sensing by Collisional Quenching
  • Oxygen sensing collisional quencher results in
    decrease in intensity or lifetime
  • Long-lifetime probes transition metal complexes
  • Dissolved in Silicon oxygen can diffuse into
    but other molecules cannot
  • Shift in lifetime and reduced intensity when
    quenched

12
Lifetime-Based Sensing of Oxygen
  • Oxygen-sensitive MLC filter used to absorb near
    450 nm
  • Fiber optic to collect fluorescence
  • Vary intensity phase angle unchanged
  • Mechanism of oxygen selectivity long lifetime
    probes are sensitive (if under 5 ns little
    quenching by oxygen)
  • Silcon support only permeable to 02

13
Other Oxygen Sensors
  • Any long lifetime probe dessolved in organic
    solvent
  • Phosphorescence long decay time
  • Camphorquinone in PVC intensity or lifetime
    changes (lifetime more reliable)
  • Platinum II octaethylporphyrin large stokes
    shift probe embedded in polystyrene
  • Osmium MLC lifetime near 300 microseconds,
    different results in two different silcones
    (supporting media important)

14
Chloride Sensors
  • Quinine contains quinolinium ring which is
    quenched by chloride
  • Probes designed to sense Cl-, different
    sensitivities to Cl-
  • Measurement of Cl- transport
  • Can also be quenched by free amines decrease in
    quenching constant in cells
  • Non-ratiometric probes

15
Energy Transfer Sensing
  • Changes due to analyte proximity or
    analyte-induced changes in absorption or emission
    spectrum of acceptor
  • Flexibility - exciting light wavelength (donor)
  • pH and pC02 eosin as donor and phenol red as
    acceptor (pKa near 7, 546 nm in base)
  • Eosin intensity decreased as pH increased
  • Can use lifetime of donor to measure
  • Uptake of analyte into supporting media

16
Glucose Sensing by Energy Transfer
  • Long term health in Diabetics currently must
    sample blood
  • Glucose Detection - Con A (Donor) and Dextran
    (Acceptor) decrease in donor intensity of
    lifetime
  • Glucose competes for binding site on ConA
    intensity and decay time increases

17
Glucose Binding Assay
  • Glucose binding released FITC dextran from
    surface in light path
  • Donor fluorescence not-completely recovered at
    high glucose concentration

18
Theory of FRET Sensing
  • Covalently linked donor and acceptor
  • Unlinked donor and acceptor donor can be in two
    forms with different absorbance spectra - two
    R0s
  • Simulate expected results with certain
    concentrations

19
pH Sensors
  • Fluorescein measure pH and pC02 in bicarbonate
    couple
  • Fluorescein leaks from cells charged
    derivatives used (BCECF) ratiometric

20
  • SNAFL and SNARF pH probes shifts in absorbance
    and emission pKa 7.6 to 7.9
  • Acid and base are fluorescent lifetimes useful
    but short (can be modified to CNF large shift
    in spectra)

21
Photoinduced Electron Transfer (PET)
  • Polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons quenching
    fluorophore by linked side chain
  • Transfer of electrons from nitrogen to aromatic
    group if nitrogen has a bound proton then
    transfer is inhibited
  • Phosphate sensor hydrogen bonding to amino
    group results in increase fluorescence
  • Quenching inefficient at long wavelengths

22
Design
pH Sensor
Phosphate Sensor
23
Analyte Recognition
  • Design of specific probes to bind an analyte
  • Specific Cation Probes
  • Development of intracellular cation probes

24
Theory of Analyte Recognition
  • Probe can exist in two state binding
    stoichiometry of 11
  • A Dissociation constant (KD)
  • The relative concentrations of free and bound
    forms can be expressed
  • If the probe fluorescence increases when analyte
    binds but does not contain a spectral shift (TITC
    state formation)

25
Wavelength Ratiometric Probes
  • Can calculate analytic concentration, where R
    F(?1)/F(?2), ratio of intensities at the two
    excitation wavelengths
  • RMIN and RMAX are the ratios for the free and
    complexed probe
  • For excitation wavelength shift
  • For emission wavelength shift
  • Can measure concentration independent of probe
    concentration

26
Ca and Mg Indicators
  • All based on BAPTA chelator binds Ca near 100
    nM affinity
  • Intracellular Ca
  • In blood Ca 5 mM
  • Does not diffuse across cell membrane
  • Many varieties have been designed

27
Immunoassays
Couple an associated antibody and antigen to some
other event that yields an observable spectral
change
ELISA coat a surface with an antibody specific
for an antigen of interest, allow antibody to
capture antigen, exposed to 2nd antibody linked
to an enzyme, provide substrate to observe
fluorescence change
Time resolved Immunoassay 2ndary antibody is
conjugated to MLC lanthanide (europium)
enhancer solution which chelates the Eu3 - light
is absorbed by chelators which transfer the
energy to the lanthide
28
Energy Transfer in Immunoassays
  • Thyroxine 4 (T4) competes for binding site on
    the acceptor
  • Follow changes in donor (phycoerythrin) becomes
    unquenched as function of T4

29
r rF(fF) rB(fB) Unlabeled cortisol competes
off labeled cortisol
30
Genetically Engineering Proteins
  • Maltose binding protein cysteine engineered
    into the cleft
  • Labeled with NBDSensitive to maltose binding

31
  • Calcium Sensing
  • M13 peptide binds Calmodulin in the presence of
    Ca
  • Conf. change results in FRET
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