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Nano-cone optical fiber array sensors for miRNA profiling

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-07-09, 14:30 authored by Yunshan Wang, Satyajyoti Senapati, Paul StoddartPaul Stoddart, Scott Howard, Hsueh Chia Chang, Hooman Mohseni, Massoud H. Agahi, Manijeh Razeghi
Up/down regulation of microRNA panels has been correlated to cardiovascular diseases and cancer. Frequent miRNA profiling at home can hence allow early cancer diagnosis and home-use chronic disease monitoring, thus reducing both mortality rate and healthcare cost. However, lifetime of miRNAs is less than 1 hour without preservation and their concentrations range from pM to mM. Despite rapid progress in the last decade, modern nucleic acid analysis methods still do not allow personalized miRNA profiling - Real-time PCR and DNA micro-array both require elaborate miRNA preservation steps and expensive equipment and nano pore sensors cannot selectively quantify a large panel with a large dynamic range. We report a novel and low-cost optical fiber sensing platform, which has the potential to profile a panel of miRNA with simple LED light sources and detectors. The individual tips of an optical imaging fiber bundle (mm in diameter with 7000 fiber cores) were etched into cones with 10 nm radius of curvature and coated with Au. FRET (Forster Resonant Energy Transfer) hairpin oligo probes, with the loop complementary to a specific miRNA that can release the hairpin, were functionalized onto the conic tips. Exciting light in the optical fiber waveguide is optimally coupled to surface plasmonics on the gold surface, which then converges to the conic tips with two orders of magnitude enhancement in intensity. Unlike nanoparticle plasmonics, tip plasmonics can be excited over a large band width and hence the plasmonic enhanced fluorescence signal of the FRET reporter is also focused towards the tip - and is further enhanced with the periodic resonant grid of the fiber array which gives rise to pronounced standing wave interference patterns. Multiplexing is realized by functionalizing different probes onto one fiber bundle using a photoactivation process.

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PDF (Published version)

ISBN

9780819496621

ISSN

0277-786X

Journal title

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Conference name

Biosensing and Nanomedicine VI

Location

San Diego, CA

Start date

2013-08-25

End date

2013-08-28

Volume

8812

Pagination

5 pp

Publisher

SPIE

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2013 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers. This paper was originally published in Proceedings of SPIE (Vol. 8812), and is available from:http//:doi.org/10.1117/12.2023727. The published version is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. One print or electronic copy may be made for personal use only. Systematic electronic or print reproduction and distribution, duplication of any material in this paper for a fee or for commercial purposes, or modification of the content are prohibited.

Language

eng

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