Physicochemical trapping of neurotransmitters in polymer-mediated gold nanoparticle aggregates for surface-enhanced raman spectroscopy

Emma Vander Ende, Marc R. Bourgeois, Anne Isabelle Henry, Jorge L. Chávez, Rachel Krabacher, George C. Schatz*, Richard P Van Duyne

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

31 Scopus citations

Abstract

Because of the sharp distance dependence of surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), analyte molecules that do not exhibit strong affinity for Au/Ag often elude detection. New methods of integrating such analytes with SERS substrates are required to circumvent this limitation and expand the sensitivity of SERS to new molecules and applications. We communicate here a solution-phase, capture agent-free method of aggregating Au nanospheres in the presence of five neurotransmitters (dopamine, epinephrine, norepinephrine, serotonin, and histamine) and preventing sedimentation by encapsulating the aggregated nanospheres with polyvinylpyrrolidone, thereby trapping the neurotransmitters in close proximity to the Au nanospheres and enabling SER detection. The primary advantages of this physicochemical trapping method, which is generalizable to analytes beyond the scope of this work, are the high signal-to-noise ratio and spectral consistency down to nM levels. Normal Raman spectra and density functional theory calculations corroborate the accuracy of the spectra. Spectra collected over a wide range of concentrations were used to construct adsorption isotherms for all five neurotransmitters, from which adsorption dissociation constants were calculated, spanning from 5.7 × 10-4 M to 1.7 × 10-10 M. We expect this method to produce high quality SER spectra of any molecule with an Au affinity known or expected (based on functional groups) to be within that range. Our results have implications for plasmonic detection of these neurotransmitters, particularly for mixtures of those that exhibited disparate Au affinity in our study. We also present evidence that this method produces spectra of sufficient resolution to explore hypotheses related to surface adsorption behavior.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)9554-9562
Number of pages9
JournalAnalytical Chemistry
Volume91
Issue number15
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 6 2019

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Analytical Chemistry

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