Core/shell nanoparticles for multiple biological detection with enhanced sensitivity and kinetics

Nanotechnology. 2008 Dec 3;19(48):485103. doi: 10.1088/0957-4484/19/48/485103. Epub 2008 Nov 11.

Abstract

The paper shows the different methods to attach a molecule to detect streptavidin to a dielectric particle made of a rare-earth oxide core and a polysiloxane shell containing fluorescein. First, the detection of streptavidin binding on a biotinylated gold substrate can be achieved in three ways: the shift of the surface plasmon resonance of the substrate and the double luminescence (organic and inorganic) of the core/shell particle. Second, these detections are efficient even after elimination upon thermal annealing of all the undesired molecules that skew the assays. Finally, the particle that ballasts the protein enhances its binding kinetics and increases the localized surface plasmon resonance shift that detects the binding.