Expanding discriminative dimensions for analysis and imaging

Eliminating the contribution of interfering compounds is a key step in chemical analysis. In complex media, one possible approach is to perform a preliminary separation. However purification is often demanding, long, and costly; it may also considerably alter the properties of interacting components...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical science (Cambridge) 2015-05, Vol.6 (5), p.2968-2978
Hauptverfasser: Querard, Jérôme, Gautier, Arnaud, Le Saux, Thomas, Jullien, Ludovic
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creator Querard, Jérôme
Gautier, Arnaud
Le Saux, Thomas
Jullien, Ludovic
description Eliminating the contribution of interfering compounds is a key step in chemical analysis. In complex media, one possible approach is to perform a preliminary separation. However purification is often demanding, long, and costly; it may also considerably alter the properties of interacting components of the mixture ( in a living cell). Hence there is a strong interest for developing separation-free non-invasive analytical protocols. Using photoswitchable probes as labelling and titration contrast agents, we demonstrate that the association of a modulated monochromatic light excitation with a kinetic filtering of the overall observable is much more attractive than constant excitation to read-out the contribution from a target probe under adverse conditions. An extensive theoretical framework enabled us to optimize the out-of-phase concentration first-order response of a photoswitchable probe to modulated illumination by appropriately matching the average light intensity and the radial frequency of the light modulation to the probe dynamics. Thus, we can selectively and quantitatively extract from an overall signal the contribution from a target photoswitchable probe within a mixture of species, photoswitchable or not. This simple titration strategy is more specifically developed in the context of fluorescence imaging, which offers promising perspectives.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/c4sc03955f
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subjects Chemical Sciences
Chemistry
Constants
Contrast agents
Excitation
Filtering
Illumination
Imaging
Labelling
Titration
title Expanding discriminative dimensions for analysis and imaging
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