Submicrometer Intracellular Chemical Optical Fiber Sensors
- 30 October 1992
- journal article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 258 (5083) , 778-781
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1439785
Abstract
A thousandfold miniaturization of immobilized optical fiber sensors, a millionfold or more sample reduction, and at least a hundredfold shorter response time, all simultaneously, were achieved by combining nanofabricated optical fiber tips with near-field photopolymerization. Specifically, pH optical fiber sensors were prepared with internal calibration, making use of the differences in both fluorescence and absorption of the acidic and basic dye species. The submicrometer sensors have excellent detection limits, as well as photostability, reversibility, and millisecond response times. Successful applications include intracellular and intraembryonic measurements. Potential applications include spatially and temporally resolved chemical analysis and kinetics inside single biological cells and their substructures.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- A fibre-optic chemical sensor with discrete sensing sitesNature, 1991
- Breaking the Diffraction Barrier: Optical Microscopy on a Nanometric ScaleScience, 1991
- Role of glutathione and hsp 70 in the acquisition of thermotolerance in postimplantation rat embryosTeratology, 1991
- A Light Source Smaller Than the Optical WavelengthScience, 1990
- Fiber-optic sensors based on reagent delivery with controlled-release polymersAnalytical Chemistry, 1989
- Fractal Reaction KineticsScience, 1988
- An optical ionic-strength sensor based on polyelectrolyte association and fluorescence energy transferTalanta, 1988
- Polymer Modification of Fiber Optic Chemical Sensors as a Method of Enhancing Fluorescence Signal for pH MeasurementAnalytical Chemistry, 1986
- Polymer modification of fiber optic chemical sensors as a method of enhancing fluorescence signal for pH measurementAnalytical Chemistry, 1986
- A fluorescence sensor for quantifying pH in the range from 6.5 to 8.5Analytica Chimica Acta, 1984