4.8 Review

Surface enhanced Raman scattering for probing cellular biochemistry

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 14, Issue 14, Pages 5314-5328

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2nr00449f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Germany's Excellence Strategy - EXC 2008 [390540038 - UniSysCat]
  2. ERC [259432]

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This mini review discusses the progress of SERS probing in cells over the past years, exploring the biochemical composition of cells and the cellular processes involving biomolecules and cellular compartments. The combination of live cell SERS with various approaches has led to a better understanding of cellular physiology and the utilization of the selectivity of SERS.
Surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) from biomolecules in living cells enables the sensitive, but also very selective, probing of their biochemical composition. This minireview discusses the developments of SERS probing in cells over the past years from the proof-of-principle to observe a biochemical status to the characterization of molecule-nanostructure and molecule-molecule interactions and cellular processes that involve a wide variety of biomolecules and cellular compartments. Progress in applying SERS as a bioanalytical tool in living cells, to gain a better understanding of cellular physiology and to harness the selectivity of SERS, has been achieved by a combination of live cell SERS with several different approaches. They range from organelle targeting, spectroscopy of relevant molecular models, and the optimization of plasmonic nanostructures to the application of machine learning and help us to unify the information from defined biomolecules and from the cell as an extremely complex system.

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