3.9 Article

AFM-IR for Nanoscale Chemical Characterization in Life Sciences: Recent Developments and Future Directions

Journal

ACS MEASUREMENT SCIENCE AU
Volume 3, Issue 5, Pages 301-314

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsmeasuresciau.3c00010

Keywords

AFM-IR; chemical imaging; biospectroscopy; single cell imaging; mid-infrared spectroscopy

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Researchers have found that the application of conventional IR microscopy in the life sciences is limited due to the restrictions on spatial resolution. The use of AFM-IR technology allows for chemical analysis of biomolecules at the nanoscale, which can contribute to the investigation of nano and microscale biological processes.
Despite the ubiquitous absorption of mid-infrared (IR) radiation by virtually all molecules that belong to the major biomolecules groups (proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids), the application of conventional IR microscopy to the life sciences remained somewhat limited, due to the restrictions on spatial resolution imposed by the diffraction limit (in the order of several micrometers). This issue is addressed by AFM-IR, a scanning probe-based technique that allows for chemical analysis at the nanoscale with resolutions down to 10 nm and thus has the potential to contribute to the investigation of nano and microscale biological processes. In this perspective, in addition to a concise description of the working principles and operating modes of AFM-IR, we present and evaluate the latest key applications of AFM-IR to the life sciences, summarizing what the technique has to offer to this field. Furthermore, we discuss the most relevant current limitations and point out potential future developments and areas for further application for fruitful interdisciplinary collaboration.

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