Author:
Needham Lisa-Maria,Saavedra Carlos,Rasch Julia K.,Sole-Barber Daniel,Schweitzer Beau S.,Fairhall Alex J.,Vollbrecht Cecilia H.,Mehlenbacher Brandon,Zhang Zhao,Tenbrake Lukas,Pfeifer Hannes,Chapman Edwin R.,Goldsmith Randall H.
Abstract
AbstractThe vast majority of chemistry and biology occurs in solution, and new label-free analytical techniques that can help resolve solution-phase complexity at the single-molecule level can provide new microscopic perspectives of unprecedented detail. Here, we use the increased light-molecule interactions in high-finesse fiber Fabry-Pérot microcavities to detect individual biomolecules as small as 1.2 kDa with signal-to-noise ratios >100, even as the molecules are freely diffusing in solution. Our method delivers 2D intensity and temporal profiles, enabling the distinction of sub-populations in mixed samples. Strikingly, we observe a linear relationship between passage time and molecular radius, unlocking the potential to gather crucial information about diffusion and solution-phase conformation. Furthermore, mixtures of biomolecule isomers of the same molecular weight can also be resolved. Detection is based on a novel molecular velocity filtering and dynamic thermal priming mechanism leveraging both photo-thermal bistability and Pound-Drever-Hall cavity locking. This technology holds broad potential for applications in life and chemical sciences and represents a major advancement in label-freein vitrosingle-molecule techniques.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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