CAS Key Laboratory for Biomedical Effects of Nanomaterials and Nanosafety, Institute of High Energy Physics, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100005, China.
ACS Sens. 2021 May 28;6(5):1704-1716. doi: 10.1021/acssensors.1c00393. Epub 2021 May 3.
The sensitive and selective detection of biomarkers for human health remains one of the grand challenges of the analytical sciences. Compared to established methods (colorimetric, (chemi) luminescent), surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is an emerging alternative with enormous potential for ultrasensitive biological detection. Indeed even attomolar (10 M) detection limits are possible for SERS due to an orders-of-magnitude boosting of Raman signals at the surface of metallic nanostructures by surface plasmons. However, challenges remain for SERS assays of large biomolecules, as the largest enhancements require the biomarker to enter a "hot spot" nanogap between metal nanostructures. The frequency-shift SERS method has gained popularity in recent years as an alternative assay that overcomes this drawback. It measures frequency shifts in intense SERS peaks of a Raman reporter during binding events on biomolecules (protein coupling, DNA hybridization, etc.) driven by mechanical transduction, charge transfer, or local electric field effects. As such, it retains the excellent multiplexing capability of SERS, with multiple analytes being identifiable by a spectral fingerprint in a single read-out. Meanwhile, like refractive index surface plasmon resonance methods, frequency-shift SERS measures the shift of an intense signal rather than resolving a peak above noise, easing spectroscopic resolution requirements. SERS frequency-shift assays have proved particularly suitable for sensing large, highly charged biomolecules that alter hydrogen-bonding networks upon specific binding. Herein we discuss the frequency-shift SERS method and promising applications in (multiplex) biomarker sensing as well as extensions to ion and gas sensing and much more.
用于人体健康的生物标志物的灵敏和选择性检测仍然是分析科学的重大挑战之一。与已建立的方法(比色法,(化学)发光法)相比,表面增强拉曼光谱(SERS)是一种新兴的替代方法,具有用于超灵敏生物检测的巨大潜力。实际上,由于在金属纳米结构表面的等离子体激元使拉曼信号增强了数量级,因此 SERS 甚至可以达到 10 的负 18 次方(10 M)的检测极限。但是,对于大生物分子的 SERS 分析仍然存在挑战,因为最大的增强要求生物标志物进入金属纳米结构之间的“热点”纳米间隙。近年来,频移 SERS 方法已作为一种替代分析方法而受到欢迎,该方法克服了这一缺点。它通过机械转导,电荷转移或局部电场效应来测量在生物分子(蛋白质偶联,DNA 杂交等)结合事件期间强 SERS 峰的频率位移,这些结合事件是由强 SERS 报告器的频率位移驱动的。因此,它保留了 SERS 的出色的多重分析能力,通过在单个读出中识别光谱指纹,可以识别多个分析物。同时,与折射率表面等离子体共振方法一样,频移 SERS 测量的是强信号的位移,而不是在噪声之上分辨出一个峰,从而降低了光谱分辨率的要求。SERS 频移分析已被证明特别适合于检测大的,带高电荷的生物分子,这些分子在特定结合时会改变氢键网络。本文讨论了频移 SERS 方法及其在(多重)生物标志物感测中的有前途的应用,以及对离子和气体感测的扩展等。