Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 263
  • Item
    Biochemical Characterization of Mouse Retina of an Alzheimer's Disease Model by Raman Spectroscopy
    (Washington, DC : ACS Publications, 2020) Stiebing, Clara; Jahn, Izabella J.; Schmitt, Michael; Keijzer, Nanda; Kleemann, Robert; Kiliaan, Amanda J.; Drexler, Wolfgang; Leitgeb, Rainer A.; Popp, Jürgen
    The presence of biomarkers characteristic for Alzheimer's disease in the retina is a controversial topic. Raman spectroscopy offers information on the biochemical composition of tissues. Thus, it could give valuable insight into the diagnostic value of retinal analysis. Within the present study, retinas of a double transgenic mouse model, that expresses a chimeric mouse/human amyloid precursor protein and a mutant form of human presenilin 1, and corresponding control group were subjected to ex vivo Raman imaging. The Raman data recorded on cross sections of whole eyes highlight the layered structure of the retina in a label-free manner. Based on the Raman information obtained from en face mounted retina samples, a discrimination between healthy and Alzheimer's disease retinal tissue can be done with an accuracy of 85.9%. For this a partial least squares-linear discriminant analysis was applied. Therefore, although no macromolecular changes in form of, i.e., amyloid beta plaques, can be noticed based on Raman spectroscopy, subtle biochemical changes happening in the retina could lead to Alzheimer's disease identification. ©
  • Item
    Present and future of surface-enhanced Raman scattering
    (Washington, DC : ACS Publications, 2020) Langer, Judith; de Aberasturi, Dorleta Jimenez; Aizpurua, Javier; Alvarez-Puebla, Ramon A.; Auguié, Baptiste; Baumberg, Jeremy J.; Bazan, Guillermo C.; Bell, Steven E.J.; Boisen, Anja; Brolo, Alexandre G.; Choo, Jaebum; Cialla-May, Dana; Deckert, Volker; Fabris, Laura; Faulds, Karen; de Abajo, F. Javier García; Goodacre, Royston; Graham, Duncan; Haes, Amanda J.; Haynes, Christy L.; Huck, Christian; Itoh, Tamitake; Käll, Mikael; Kneipp, Janina; Kotov, Nicholas A.; Kuang, Hua; Le Ru, Eric C.; Lee, Hiang Kwee; Li, Jian-Feng; Ling, Xing Yi; Maier, Stefan A.; Mayerhöfer, Thomas; Moskovits, Martin; Murakoshi, Kei; Nam, Jwa-Min; Nie, Shuming; Ozaki, Yukihiro; Pastoriza-Santos, Isabel; Perez-Juste, Jorge; Popp, Juergen; Pucci, Annemarie; Reich, Stephanie; Ren, Bin; Schatz, George C.; Shegai, Timur; Schlücker, Sebastian; Tay, Li-Lin; Thomas, K. George; Tian, Zhong-Qun; Van Duyne, Richard P.; Vo-Dinh, Tuan; Wang, Yue; Willets, Katherine A.; Xu, Chuanlai; Xu, Hongxing; Xu, Yikai; Yamamoto, Yuko S.; Zhao, Bing; Liz-Marzán, Luis M.
    The discovery of the enhancement of Raman scattering by molecules adsorbed on nanostructured metal surfaces is a landmark in the history of spectroscopic and analytical techniques. Significant experimental and theoretical effort has been directed toward understanding the surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) effect and demonstrating its potential in various types of ultrasensitive sensing applications in a wide variety of fields. In the 45 years since its discovery, SERS has blossomed into a rich area of research and technology, but additional efforts are still needed before it can be routinely used analytically and in commercial products. In this Review, prominent authors from around the world joined together to summarize the state of the art in understanding and using SERS and to predict what can be expected in the near future in terms of research, applications, and technological development. This Review is dedicated to SERS pioneer and our coauthor, the late Prof. Richard Van Duyne, whom we lost during the preparation of this article.
  • Item
    Rapid detection of the aspergillosis biomarker triacetylfusarinine C using interference-enhanced Raman spectroscopy
    (Berlin ; Heidelberg : Springer, 2020) Pahlow S.; Orasch T.; Žukovskaja O.; Bocklitz T.; Haas H.; Weber K.
    Triacetylfusarinine C (TAFC) is a siderophore produced by certain fungal species and might serve as a highly useful biomarker for the fast diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis. Due to its renal elimination, the biomarker is found in urine samples of patients suffering from Aspergillus infections. Accordingly, non-invasive diagnosis from this easily obtainable body fluid is possible. Within our contribution, we demonstrate how Raman microspectroscopy enables a sensitive and specific detection of TAFC. We characterized the TAFC iron complex and its iron-free form using conventional and interference-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (IERS) and compared the spectra with the related compound ferrioxamine B, which is produced by bacterial species. Even though IERS only offers a moderate enhancement of the Raman signal, the employment of respective substrates allowed lowering the detection limit to reach the clinically relevant range. The achieved limit of detection using IERS was 0.5 ng of TAFC, which is already well within the clinically relevant range. By using an extraction protocol, we were able to detect 1.4 μg/mL TAFC via IERS from urine within less than 3 h including sample preparation and data analysis. We could further show that TAFC and ferrioxamine B can be clearly distinguished by means of their Raman spectra even in very low concentrations. © 2020, The Author(s).
  • Item
    Discrimination between pathogenic and non-pathogenic E. coli strains by means of Raman microspectroscopy
    (Berlin ; Heidelberg : Springer, 2020) Lorenz B.; Ali N.; Bocklitz T.; Rösch P.; Popp J.
    Bacteria can be harmless commensals, beneficial probiotics, or harmful pathogens. Therefore, mankind is challenged to detect and identify bacteria in order to prevent or treat bacterial infections. Examples are identification of species for treatment of infection in clinics and E. coli cell counting for water quality monitoring. Finally, in some instances, the pathogenicity of a species is of interest. The main strategies to investigate pathogenicity are detection of target genes which encode virulence factors. Another strategy could be based on phenotypic identification. Raman spectroscopy is a promising phenotypic method, which offers high sensitivities and specificities for the identification of bacteria species. In this study, we evaluated whether Raman microspectroscopy could be used to determine the pathogenicity of E. coli strains. We used Raman spectra of seven non-pathogenic and seven pathogenic E. coli strains to train a PCA-SVM model. Then, the obtained model was tested by identifying the pathogenicity of three additional E. coli strains. The pathogenicity of these three strains could be correctly identified with a mean sensitivity of 77%, which is suitable for a fast screening of pathogenicity of single bacterial cells. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]. © 2020, The Author(s).
  • Item
    Plasmon induced deprotonation of 2-mercaptopyridine
    (Cambridge : Royal Society of Chemistry, 2020) Singh P.; Deckert-Gaudig T.; Zhang Z.; Deckert V.
    Surface plasmons can provide a novel route to induce and simultaneously monitor selective bond formation and breakage. Here pH-induced protonation, followed by plasmon-induced deprotonation of 2-mercaptopyridine was investigated using surface- and tip-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS and TERS). A large difference in the deprotonation rate between SERS and TERS will be demonstrated and discussed with respect to hot-spot distribution. © 2020 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
  • Item
    Characterisation of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus from Alexandria, Egypt
    (Basel : MDPI, 2023) Monecke, Stefan; Bedewy, Amira K.; Müller, Elke; Braun, Sascha D.; Diezel, Celia; Elsheredy, Amel; Kader, Ola; Reinicke, Martin; Ghazal, Abeer; Rezk, Shahinda; Ehricht, Ralf
    The present study aims to characterise clinical MRSA isolates from a tertiary care centre in Egypt’s second-largest city, Alexandria. Thirty isolates collected in 2020 were genotypically characterised by microarray to detect their resistance and virulence genes and assign them to clonal complexes (CC) and strains. Isolates belonged to 11 different CCs and 14 different strains. CC15-MRSA-[V+fus] (n = 6), CC1-MRSA-[V+fus+tir+ccrA/B-1] (PVL+) (n = 5) as well as CC1-MRSA-[V+fus+tir+ccrA/B-1] and CC1153-MRSA-[V+fus] (PVL+) (both with n = 3) were the most common strains. Most isolates (83%) harboured variant or composite SCCmec V or VI elements that included the fusidic acid resistance gene fusC. The SCCmec [V+fus+tir+ccrA/B-1] element of one of the CC1 isolates was sequenced, revealing a presence not only of fusC but also of blaZ, aacA-aphD and other resistance genes. PVL genes were also common (40%). The hospital-acquired MRSA CC239-III strain was only found twice. A comparison to data from a study on strains collected in 2015 (Montelongo et al., 2022) showed an increase in fusC and PVL carriage and a decreasing prevalence of the CC239 strain. These observations indicate a diffusion of community-acquired strains into hospital settings. The beta-lactam use in hospitals and the widespread fusidic acid consumption in the community might pose a selective pressure that favours MRSA strains with composite SCCmec elements comprising mecA and fusC. This is an unsettling trend, but more MRSA typing data from Egypt are required.
  • Item
    Superelasticity of Plasma- and Synthetic Membranes Resulting from Coupling of Membrane Asymmetry, Curvature, and Lipid Sorting
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2021) Steinkühler, Jan; Fonda, Piermarco; Bhatia, Tripta; Zhao, Ziliang; Leomil, Fernanda S. C.; Lipowsky, Reinhard; Dimova, Rumiana
    Biological cells are contained by a fluid lipid bilayer (plasma membrane, PM) that allows for large deformations, often exceeding 50% of the apparent initial PM area. Isolated lipids self-organize into membranes, but are prone to rupture at small (<2–4%) area strains, which limits progress for synthetic reconstitution of cellular features. Here, it is shown that by preserving PM structure and composition during isolation from cells, vesicles with cell-like elasticity can be obtained. It is found that these plasma membrane vesicles store significant area in the form of nanotubes in their lumen. These act as lipid reservoirs and are recruited by mechanical tension applied to the outer vesicle membrane. Both in experiment and theory, it is shown that a “superelastic” response emerges from the interplay of lipid domains and membrane curvature. This finding allows for bottom-up engineering of synthetic biomaterials that appear one magnitude softer and with threefold larger deformability than conventional lipid vesicles. These results open a path toward designing superelastic synthetic cells possessing the inherent mechanics of biological cells.
  • Item
    Comparability of Raman Spectroscopic Configurations: A Large Scale Cross-Laboratory Study
    (Columbus, Ohio : American Chemical Society, 2020) Guo S.; Beleites C.; Neugebauer U.; Abalde-Cela S.; Afseth N.K.; Alsamad F.; Anand S.; Araujo-Andrade C.; Aškrabić S.; Avci E.; Baia M.; Baranska M.; Baria E.; Batista De Carvalho L.A.E.; De Bettignies P.; Bonifacio A.; Bonnier F.; Brauchle E.M.; Byrne H.J.; Chourpa I.; Cicchi R.; Cuisinier F.; Culha M.; Dahms M.; David C.; Duponchel L.; Duraipandian S.; El-Mashtoly S.F.; Ellis D.I.; Eppe G.; Falgayrac G.; Gamulin O.; Gardner B.; Gardner P.; Gerwert K.; Giamarellos-Bourboulis E.J.; Gizurarson S.; Gnyba M.; Goodacre R.; Grysan P.; Guntinas-Lichius O.; Helgadottir H.; Grošev V.M.; Kendall C.; Kiselev R.; Kölbach M.; Krafft C.; Krishnamoorthy S.; Kubryck P.; Lendl B.; Loza-Alvarez P.; Lyng F.M.; Machill S.; Malherbe C.; Marro M.; Marques M.P.M.; Matuszyk E.; Morasso C.F.; Moreau M.; Muhamadali H.; Mussi V.; Notingher I.; Pacia M.Z.; Pavone F.S.; Penel G.; Petersen D.; Piot O.; Rau J.V.; Richter M.; Rybarczyk M.K.; Salehi H.; Schenke-Layland K.; Schlücker S.; Schosserer M.; Schütze K.; Sergo V.; Sinjab F.; Smulko J.; Sockalingum G.D.; Stiebing C.; Stone N.; Untereiner V.; Vanna R.; Wieland K.; Popp J.; Bocklitz T.
    The variable configuration of Raman spectroscopic platforms is one of the major obstacles in establishing Raman spectroscopy as a valuable physicochemical method within real-world scenarios such as clinical diagnostics. For such real world applications like diagnostic classification, the models should ideally be usable to predict data from different setups. Whether it is done by training a rugged model with data from many setups or by a primary-replica strategy where models are developed on a 'primary' setup and the test data are generated on 'replicate' setups, this is only possible if the Raman spectra from different setups are consistent, reproducible, and comparable. However, Raman spectra can be highly sensitive to the measurement conditions, and they change from setup to setup even if the same samples are measured. Although increasingly recognized as an issue, the dependence of the Raman spectra on the instrumental configuration is far from being fully understood and great effort is needed to address the resulting spectral variations and to correct for them. To make the severity of the situation clear, we present a round robin experiment investigating the comparability of 35 Raman spectroscopic devices with different configurations in 15 institutes within seven European countries from the COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) action Raman4clinics. The experiment was developed in a fashion that allows various instrumental configurations ranging from highly confocal setups to fibre-optic based systems with different excitation wavelengths. We illustrate the spectral variations caused by the instrumental configurations from the perspectives of peak shifts, intensity variations, peak widths, and noise levels. We conclude this contribution with recommendations that may help to improve the inter-laboratory studies. © 2020 American Chemical Society.
  • Item
    Spectrometer‐free Optical Hydrogen Sensing Based on Fano‐like Spatial Distribution of Transmission in a Metal−Insulator−Metal Plasmonic Doppler Grating
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2021) Chen, Yi‐Ju; Lin, Fan‐Cheng; Singh, Ankit Kumar; Ouyang, Lei; Huang, Jer‐Shing
    Optical nanosensors are promising for hydrogen sensing because they are small, free from spark generation, and feasible for remote optical readout. Conventional optical nanosensors require broadband excitation and spectrometers, rendering the devices bulky and complex. An alternative is spatial intensity-based optical sensing, which only requires an imaging system and a smartly designed platform to report the spatial distribution of analytical optical signals. Here, a spatial intensity-based hydrogen sensing platform is presented based on Fano-like spatial distribution of the transmission in a Pd-Al2O3-Au metal-insulator-metal plasmonic Doppler grating (MIM-PDG). The MIM-PDG manifests the Fano resonance as an asymmetric spatial transmission intensity profile. The absorption of hydrogen changes the spatial Fano-like transmission profiles, which can be analyzed with a “spatial” Fano resonance model and the extracted Fano resonance parameters can be used to establish analytical calibration lines. While gratings sensitive to hydrogen absorption are suitable for hydrogen sensing, hydrogen insensitive gratings are also found, which provide an unperturbed reference signal and may find applications in nanophotonic devices that require a stable optical response under fluctuating hydrogen atmosphere. The MIM-PDG platform is a spectrometer-free and intensity-based optical sensor that requires only an imaging system, making it promising for cellphone-based optical sensing applications. © 2021 The Authors. Advanced Optical Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
  • Item
    Advanced fiber in-coupling through nanoprinted axially symmetric structures
    (New York, NY : AIP, 2023) Yermakov, Oleh; Zeisberger, Matthias; Schneidewind, Henrik; Kim, Jisoo; Bogdanov, Andrey; Kivshar, Yuri; Schmidt, Markus A.
    Here, we introduce and demonstrate nanoprinted all-dielectric nanostructures located on fiber end faces as a novel concept for the efficient coupling of light into optical fibers, especially at multiple incidence angles and across large angular intervals. Taking advantage of the unique properties of the nanoprinting technology, such as flexibly varying the width, height, and gap distance of each individual element, we realize different polymeric axial-symmetric structures, such as double-pitch gratings and aperiodic arrays, placed on the facet of commercial step-index fibers. Of particular note is the aperiodic geometry, enabling an unprecedentedly high average coupling efficiency across the entire angular range up to 80°, outperforming regular gratings and especially bare fibers by orders of magnitude. The excellent agreement between simulation and experiment clearly demonstrates the quality of the fabricated structures and the high accuracy of the nanoprinting process. Our approach enables realizing highly integrated and ready-to-use fiber devices, defining a new class of compact, flexible, and practically relevant all-fiber devices beyond the state-of-art. Applications can be found in a variety of cutting-edge fields that require highly efficient light collection over selected angular intervals, such as endoscopy or quantum technologies. Furthermore, fiber functionalization through nanoprinting represents a promising approach for interfacing highly complex functional photonic structures with optical fibers.