4.8 Article

Label-Free Optical Detection of DNA Translocations through Plasmonic Nanopores

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 61-70

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b06758

Keywords

plasmonic nanopores; plasmon resonance sensing; solid-state nanopores; DNA translocation; optical transmission

Funding

  1. National Human Genome Research Institute of the National Institute of Health [1R01HG007406-01]
  2. ERC Advanced grants SynDiv [669598]
  3. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO/OCW), as part of the Frontiers of Nanoscience program
  4. China Scholarship Council [CSC201606740021]

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Solid-state nanopores are single-molecule sensors that hold great potential for rapid protein and nucleic-acid analysis. Despite their many opportunities, the conventional ionic current detection scheme that is at the heart of the sensor suffers inherent limitations. This scheme intrinsically couples signal strength to the driving voltage, requires the use of high-concentration electrolytes, suffers from capacitive noise, and impairs high-density sensor integration. Here, we propose a fundamentally different detection scheme based on the enhanced light transmission through a plasmonic nanopore. We demonstrate that translocations of single DNA molecules can be optically detected, without the need of any labeling, in the transmitted light intensity through an inverted-bowtie plasmonic nanopore. Characterization and the cross-correlation of the optical signals with their electrical counterparts verify the plasmonic basis of the optical signal. We demonstrate DNA translocation event detection in a regime of driving voltages and buffer conditions where traditional ionic current sensing fails. This label-free optical detection scheme offers opportunities to probe native DNA protein interactions at physiological conditions.

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