Abstract

Recent innovations in microscopy techniques are paving the way for label-free studies of single nanoscopic biological entities such as viruses, lipid-nanoparticle drug carriers, and even proteins. One such technique is waveguide evanescent-field microscopy, which offers a relatively simple, yet sensitive, way of achieving label-free light scattering-based imaging of nanoparticles on surfaces. Herein, we extend the application of this technique by incorporating microfluidic liquid control and adapting the design for use with inverted microscopes by fabricating a waveguide on a transparent substrate. We furthermore formulate analytical models describing scattering and fluorescence intensities from single spherical and shell-like objects interacting with evanescent fields. The models are then applied to analyze scattering and fluorescence intensities from adsorbed polystyrene beads and to temporally resolve cholera-toxin B (CTB) binding to individual surface-immobilized glycosphingolipid GM1 containing vesicles. We also propose a self-consistent means to quantify the thickness of the CTB layer, revealing that protein-binding to individual vesicles can be characterized with sub-nm precision in a time-resolved manner.

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