SPR Badia
SPR Badia
SPR Badia
SPR Spectroscopy - Overview: The detection principle relies on an electron charge density wave phenomenon that arises at the surface of a metallic film when light is reflected at the film under specific conditions. Molecular adsorption/desorption events are measured as a change in the refractive index at the metal film surface (sensing surface). Advantages:
Label-free detection technique Distinguishes surface-bound material from bulk material Monitor molecular interactions in real-time (kinetics) Highly-sensitive ( dfilm of ~1-2 or nanograms of adsorbed mass) Works in turbid or opaque samples 2
RNA/DNA
Protein/DNA
Protein/Peptide
O HO O O N H O H N H2N OH NH O OH
Protein/Carbohydrates
HN
NH2 NH
Basic Principle
A binding molecule is bound to the sensor surface (eg. a peptide) Another (the analyte) is passed over the surface and binds to it.
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Electrochemistry
S S
Fe
S
Fe
S
Fe Fe
-e
-
+e
-
S
Fe
S
Fe
S
Fe
S
Fe
MUA PEI - + ++ + + + + - + - - - ++ + + -+ -+ +- + + + - + + +- + + -+ + HA
S S S S
R R R R
A A A A
B B B B B B
PE Multilayers
+ - ++ + - ++ + + +- -+ - HA,CH,etc... -+ -++ + - ++ -- + + + -+ ++ ++- + + + -+ - + - + - ++ +- -+ ++ + -- + - -+ +- - + - - CH -+-+ + + -+ - + + + ++ + - +- -+ -+ +- - + + -
Interfacial Reactions
S S S S
R R R R
A A A A
B B
Surface plasmons
Surface plasmons
Plasmons are collective charge density oscillations of the nearly free electron gas in a metal. Plasmons can be excited both in the bulk and on the surface of a metal. Surface plasmons or surface plasmon polaritrons are surface electromagnetic waves that propagate parallel along a metal/dielectric interface.
real
Conditions to be met:
the metal must be negative | real| of metal > real of dielectric
real
real of
metal (
m)
Conditions are met in the IR-visible wavelength region for air/metal and water/metal interfaces (where m is negative and d of air or water is positive). Typical metals that support surface plasmons are silver and gold. Electronic surface plasmons obey the following dispersion relation:
kSP =
d m
d+ m
Reflectivity (a.u.)
The fully reflected beam leaks an electrical field intensity (i.e. evanescent field wave) into the low refractive index medium. No photons exit the reflecting surface but their electric field decreases exponentially with distance from the interface, decaying over a distance of ~1/4 wavelength beyond the surface. If the lower refractive index media has a non-zero absorption coefficient, the evanescent field wave may transfer the matching photon energy to the 9 medium.
SPR phenomenon
TIR-interface coated with a thin metal layer
Under specific conditions (i.e. incident angle of the light beam or wavelength ), the electromagnetic field component of the p-polarized light penetrates the metal layer, and energy is transferred to the metals electrons. This energy transfer produces surface plasmon polaritrons at the metal-medium interface. As a result of the energy transfer, there is a decrease in the reflected light intensity (gray region) at a specific angle of incidence.
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SPR-evanescent wave
The surface plasmon wave propagates in the x- and ydirections along the metaldielectric interface, for distances of ~ tens to hundreds of microns and decays evanescently in the z-direction (into the low refractive index medium) with 1/e decay lengths on the order of 200 nm. Due to its electromagnetic and surface propagating nature, the surface plasmon wave enhances the evanescent electric field amplitude.
y (SPR-evanescent wave)
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ksp =
( m + d)
c
d
k ph =
13
photon
>
Otto configuration
(thin gap)
SPR-based measurements
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SPR-based measurements
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Metal-coated high-refractive index prism (BK7, sapphire, LaSFN9, SF10, etc.) ATR/Kretschmann configuration Single wavelength p-polarized incident light The reflected light intensity is measured as a function of the angle of incidence . The angle scan changes the wavevector kx of the incident light onto the prism base.
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Reflectivity (a.u.)
c o
Angle-shift design 1
A lens is used to focus the light beam onto the prism base. Within the focus, a variety of angles of incidence are covered. The angle range (typically a few degrees) is given by the focal length of the lens and the beam diameter. The reflection curve is monitored by a PSD or a linear CCD array. An array scan of reflectivity vs. pixel number is obtained which cannot be modeled using Fresnel equations.
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Angle-shift design 2
The laser and detector arm are moved synchronously using a -2 goniometer and the reflected light intensity is measured as a function of the angle of incidence. The resulting reflectivity vs. incidence angle plot can be modeled using Fresnel equations.
Width1/2
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Surface interactions
Direct coupling of ligand (binding molecule) to surface Indirect, via a capture molecule (eg. a specific IgG) Membrane anchoring, where the interacting ligand is on the surface of a captured liposome
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Surface Chemistry
Hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces
Immobilize ligand
Direct coupling - attach ligand chemically via a linker Capturing - attach a protein that binds your target
References: Jonsen et. al 1991 (Anal Biochem 198, 268-277); OShannessy et. al., 1992 (Biochem 205, 132-136)
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Allows covalent coupling via -NH2, -SH, -CHO & -COOH groups:
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detector
Au film H2O
molecular adsorption
las er
detector
Au film
detector
Au film
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adsorbate injection
Injection of adsorbate
II I time t
1
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The sensorgram
o
()
d)
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()
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Surface concentration
Resonance angle change is proportional to mass change (mass of bound material). The change in surface refractive index is essentially the same for a given mass concentration change (allows mass/concentration deductions to be made). Example: same specific response for different proteins
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o
d
= c1 n + c2 d
adsorbate layer
% Reflectivity
Bare Au + Adsorbate
o()
()
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Modeling with Fresnel equations: Winspall software (freeware, Wolfgang Knoll, MPI-P)
= c1 n + c2 d
Prism
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Fe
Fe
Fe
Fe
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Fe
Fe
Fe
Fe
n2
n1
n 2 < n1
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()
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Determine adsorbate film thickness (dfilm) from Fresnel fitting of the experimental angular reflectivity curve Determine the incremental change in the bulk refractive index with concentration of the adsorbate ( nadsorbate/ c) using refractometry The surface excess ( / molcm-2) is calculated according:
= d(nfilm nsolvent )
n of hydrocarbon films
1 nadsorbate / c
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Binding kinetics
Req
2
AB A+B koff
Resonance
A+B kon
AB
1
Time
1
A B
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K=
kon koff
We may write:
Req = Rmax
a0 K a0 K + 1
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SPR-based measurements
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SPR Imaging
% Reflectivity
%R
()
In SPR imaging, the reflectivity change, %R, is determined by measuring the SPR signal at a fixed angle of incidence before and after selective molecular 46 adsorption across a fixed surface.
Problems of SPR
Non-specific interactions
Good news- Everything has an SPR signal! Bad news- Everything has an SPR signal!
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Future of SPR
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