4 October 2001 ÷ Researchers at Penn State University
and SurroMed, Inc., in the 5 October issue of the journal Science
report on the fabrication, optical properties, and initial application
of microscopic metallic barcodes. When coated with biomolecules, these
patterned metallic particles enable the simultaneous monitoring of multiple
biological reactions in very small volumes of fluid.
The researchers prepare these barcoded particles by sequentially electroplating
different metals within narrow channels to form metallic rods having complex
striping patterns. To read out the striping pattern, scientists take advantage
of the fact that metals such as gold and silver reflect colored light
differently. For example, silver looks much brighter under blue light
than does gold, thus a gold-silver multistriped particle gives a pattern
of light and dark stripes reminiscent of conventional barcodes of the
sort used in the retail industry.
The researchers have prepared particles with stripes from 50 nanometers
to 5 micrometers in length, with up to 13 different segments or 5 different
metals. This flexibility means that it should be possible to create thousands
of different distinguishable barcode patterns. The scientists have coated
particles of a given pattern such that they bind molecules of interest
from solution. Thus, the particle striping pattern encodes the identity
of the molecule to be detected on that particle. The scientists then use
a standard laboratory technique to determine the presence or absence of
the specific molecules of interest. The researchers anticipate that barcoded
particles will enable them to track and identify multiple biological components
in clinical samples in a manner analogous to barcodes used in tracking
inventory.
As a proof of principle for the use of these particles in bioanalysis,
the scientists demonstrated their utility in two types of bioassays employing
DNA and antibodies. Using an immunoassay protocol, they showed that it
was possible to distinguish between human and rabbit antibodies on the
basis of the barcode pattern. In addition, experiments monitoring DNA
hybridization demonstrated the potential for this technology in, for example,
the detection of medically important errors in DNA sequences.
The paper, titled Submicrometer Metallic Barcodes, describes
work done in collaboration by Professors Christine Keating and
Michael Natan, and their research groups in the chemistry department
at Penn State, and by researchers at SurroMed working under the direction
of Natan, who now is Chief Technical Officer there. SurroMed has obtained
a broad and exclusive license from Penn State, and has copyrighted the
term, NanobarcodesTM particles.
Keating says, These particles represent a fundamentally new way
to encode information on the submicron scale, which gives us more options
for detection than previous techniques for particle encoding. The particles
are easy to synthesize in what promises to be an incredible variety of
distinguishable patterns. This strategy could be a significant improvement
over previous approaches, which have relied on combinations of fluorescent
dyes for particle identification. In fact, for metallic barcodes it is
possible to envision future detection schemes that avoid fluorescence
altogether. The particles themselves are quite robust-unlike molecular
fluorescent dyes, we have found that the metallic barcode pattern does
not degrade even under intense, prolonged illumination.
Natan said, Multiplexing has become a fundamental tenet of life
science research. Scientists are no longer content merely to synthesize
or measure one or even 100 species at a time. An excellent example is
the gene chip, where it is possible to measure 10,000 different genes
in parallel at a series of tiny spots on the chip surface. There has been
a tremendous need for analogous technologies that operate in solution,
and accordingly there has been substantial research and development effort
in the area of encoded microparticles. However, the number of uniquely
identifiable particles that could be prepared by previous methods was
quite limited; with Nanobarcodes, we saw an opportunity to fabricate an
essentially unlimited number of codes.
This research was funded, in part, by the National Institutes of Health.
The full text of the paper can be viewed at < http://www.sciencemag.org/
>.
[ C K / B K K ]
CONTACTS:
Penn State University
Barbara K. Kennedy (PIO)
phone: 814-863-4682
email:science@psu.edu
SurroMed, Inc.
Michael J. Natan
Chief Technology Officer
SurroMed, Inc.
Phone:650-230-1589
Email:mnatan@surromed.com
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Photos (click on image below to download high-resolution image for publication) |
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Caption: Each of these particles is about
4.5 microns long--about one-twentieth the diameter of a human hair,
which is about 100 microns. Alternating gold and silver stripes
create the "barcode" pattern on these tiny particles.
When viewed in blue light under a microscope, silver is much more
reflective than gold, making different-patterned particles easy
to identify.
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