NABIAM Lecture Series: Bio-sensors and precise measurements



NABIAM launched series of scientific lectures covering Nanotechnology-Biosensors-Additive Manufacturing project topics.


07.12.2020

We would like to invite you to the first round of presentations given by Dr. Barbora Špačková (Chalmers University of Technology) and Dr. Yoojin Oh (Johannes Kepler University) focused on bio-sensors and precise measurements.

When: 10.12.2020, 15:30 (CET)

Where: MS Teams - https://bit.ly/nabiam_lectures_2020-12-10

Lecture abstracts:

Dr. Barbora Špačková - NANOFLUIDIC SCATTERING MICROSCOPY

A new microscopic technique – Nanochannel Scattering Microscopy (NSM) will be described. This  technique enables direct imaging of a freely moving small biomolecule in real-time down to 100 kDa. The  device works like a nanoflow cytometer where every individual biomolecule is visualized and also its size  and the molecular weight is determined. It could be used in applications such as single-molecule mass spectrometry, investigation of biomolecular interaction, or particle counting.

Dr. Yoojin Oh - FORCE SPECTROSCOPY AND RECOGNITION IMAGING: Quantifying Binding Strength and Affinity on the Single-Molecule Level

Single-molecule and single-cell force spectroscopy are appropriate tools for retrieving accurate dynamic and statistical information about  the nanomechanical behavior of molecular bonds involved in adhesion to biotic and abiotic surfaces. In biochemistry, the determination  of the equilibrium dissociation constant is key for quantifying the interaction between biological molecules. Despite the wide range  of approaches in increasing the measurement sensitivity for minute sample amounts, critical limitations with respect to labelling,  fluorescence tags, and low detection signals combined with high noise are difficult to overcome. This intimately leads to requirements of  new measurement tools that combine high sensitivity with nano-scale spatial resolution. In recent years, the topography and recognition  (TREC) imaging technique, based on force spectroscopy in resonance, has been utilized for mapping bio-molecular recognition events to  localize bio-molecules at the nano-scale. In the present work, we fabricated DNA arrays on glass or silicon substrates as platforms capable  for sensing single molecular interactions. We employed TREC to characterize the DNA array and quantified the equilibrium dissociation   constant Kd of DNA duplexes from recognition images, yielding Kd = 2.4 × 10-10 M. Using TREC we developed an affinity sensing assay, which can be directly assessed without any labelling or secondary binding for detection.