
Tommy Nylander
Professor

Surface nanostructures for fluorescence probing of supported lipid bilayers on reflective substrates.
Author
Summary, in English
The fluorescence interference contrast (FLIC) effect prevents the use of fluorescence techniques to probe the continuity and fluidity of supported lipid bilayers on reflective materials due to a lack of detectable fluorescence. Here we show that adding nanostructures onto reflective surfaces to locally confer a certain distance between the deposited fluorophores and the reflecting surface enables fluorescence detection on the nanostuctures. The nanostructures consist of either deposited nanoparticles or epitaxial nanowires directly grown on the substrate and are designed such that they can support a lipid bilayer. This simple method increases the fluorescence signal sufficiently to enable bilayer fluorescence detection and to observe the recovery of fluorescence after photobleaching in order to assess lipid bilayer formation on any reflective surface.
Department/s
- Physical Chemistry
- NanoLund: Center for Nanoscience
- Solid State Physics
- Neuronano Research Center (NRC)
Publishing year
2015
Language
English
Pages
18020-18024
Publication/Series
Nanoscale
Volume
7
Issue
43
Full text
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Topic
- Biophysics
Status
Published
Research group
- Neuronano Research Center (NRC)
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 2040-3372