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  2. Ultrafast, Ultrasensitive Detection and Imaging of Single Cardiac Troponin-T Molecules

Ultrafast, Ultrasensitive Detection and Imaging of Single Cardiac Troponin-T Molecules

  • ACS Sens. 2020 Nov 25;5(11):3576-3583. doi: 10.1021/acssensors.0c01790.
Pavel N Melentiev 1 2 Lina V Son 3 4 Denis S Kudryavtsev 3 Igor E Kasheverov 3 Victor I Tsetlin 3 Rinat O Esenaliev 5 Victor I Balykin 1 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Institute of Spectroscopy RAS, Troitsk, Moscow 108840, Russia.
  • 2 Higher School of Economics, National Research University, Moscow 101000, Russia.
  • 3 Shemyakin-Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry of the RAS, Moscow 117997, Russia.
  • 4 Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Dolgoprudny, Moscow reg. 141700, Russia.
  • 5 The University of Texas Medical Branch, 301 University Boulevard, Galveston, Texas 77555, United States.
Abstract

The fluorescence-based methods of single-molecule optical detection have opened up unprecedented possibilities for imaging, monitoring, and sensing at a single-molecule level. However, single-molecule detection methods are very slow, making them practically inapplicable. In this paper, we show how to overcome this key limitation using the expanded laser spot, laser excitation in a nonfluorescent spectral window of biomolecules, and more binding fluorescent molecules on a biomolecule that increases the detection volume and the number of collected photons. We demonstrate advantages of the developed approach unreachable by any other technique using detection of single cardiac troponin-T molecules: (i) 1000-fold faster than by known approaches, (ii) real-time imaging of single troponin-T molecules dissolved in human blood serum, (iii) measurement of troponin-T concentration with a clinically important sensitivity of about 1 pg/mL. The developed approach can be used for ultrafast, ultrasensitive detection, monitoring, and real-time imaging of other biomolecules as well as of larger objects including pathogenic viruses and bacteria.

Keywords

cardiomarkers; real-time bio-imaging; single biomolecule detection; single-molecule counting techniques in sensorics; troponin-T.

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