We report recent achievements in metal-enhanced fluorescence from our laboratory. Several fluorophore systems have been studied on metal particle-coated surfaces and in colloid suspensions. In particular, we describe a distance dependent enhancement on silver island films (SIFs), release of self-quenching of fluorescence near silver particles, and the applications of fluorescence enhancement near metalized surfaces to bioassays. We discuss a number of methods for various shaped silver particle deposition on surfaces.
It is well known that polyelectrolyte complexes and coacervates can form on mixing oppositely charged polyelectrolytes in aqueous solutions, due to mainly electrostatic attraction between the oppositely charged polymers. Here, we report the first (to the best of our knowledge) complexation and coacervation of two positively charged polyelectrolytes, which provides a new paradigm for engineering strong, self-healing interactions between polyelectrolytes underwater and a new marine mussel-inspired underwater adhesion mechanism. Unlike the conventional complex coacervate, the like-charged coacervate is aggregated by strong short-range cation-π interactions by overcoming repulsive electrostatic interactions. The resultant phase of the like-charged coacervate comprises a thin and fragile polyelectrolyte framework and round and regular pores, implying a strong electrostatic correlation among the polyelectrolyte frameworks. The like-charged coacervate possesses a very low interfacial tension, which enables this highly positively charged coacervate to be applied to capture, carry, or encapsulate anionic biomolecules and particles with a broad range of applications.polyelectrolyte complexes | complex coacervates | cation-π interaction | like-charged coacervate | surface forces apparatus I t is well known that polyelectrolyte complexes can be formed when oppositely charged polyelectrolytes are mixed in aqueous solutions (1-4). This often leads to fluid-fluid phase separation, the so-called complex coacervation, namely, the appearance of a dense polyelectrolyte-rich liquid phase (coacervate phase) and a more dilute solution phase (aqueous phase, Fig. 1) (3, 4). The formation of polyelectrolyte complexes or coacervate can be impacted by many factors, including structural features of the component polymers (e.g., molecular weight, charge density, functional groups, hydrophilicity and hydrophobicity balance, etc.), mixing ratio and concentration of the oppositely charged polyelectrolytes, and solution and environmental conditions (e.g., pH, ionic strength, temperature, etc.) (3-5).Complex coacervate, which was suggested as "the origin of life" (6), finds application in many engineering and biological systems, such as microencapsulation in food, and in pharmaceutical and cosmetic industries due to the low interfacial energy of the coacervate phase (3,5,(7)(8)(9). Complex coacervate also plays a critical role in the underwater adhesion of many sessile marine organisms such as tubeworms and mussels, which secrete and disperse adhesive proteins to form complex coacervates that facilitate their positioning and spreading over a desired substrate under seawater (10-12).It is believed that polyelectrolyte complexation is driven by mainly electrostatic attraction in long distances between oppositely charged polymer chains in water and by additional molecular recognition driving forces such as chirality, hydrogen bonding, and hydration in short distances, implying that the polyelectrolyte complex is composed of at least one polycation ...
Adhesive systems in many marine organisms are postulated to form complex coacervates (liquid-liquid phase separation) through a process involving oppositely charged polyelectrolytes. Despite this ubiquitous speculation, most well-characterized mussel adhesive proteins are cationic and polyphenolic, and the pursuit of the negatively charged proteins required for bulk complex coacervation formation internally remains elusive. In this study, we provide a clue for unraveling this paradox by showing the bulky fluid/fluid separation of a single cationic recombinant mussel foot protein, rmfp-1, with no additional anionic proteins or artificial molecules, that is triggered by a strong cation-π interaction in natural seawater conditions. With the similar condition of salt concentration at seawater level (>0.7 M), the electrostatic repulsion between positively charged residues of mfp-1 is screened significantly, whereas the strong cation-π interaction remains unaffected, which leads to the macroscopic phase separation (i.e., bulky coacervate formation). The single polyelectrolyte coacervate shows interesting mechanical properties including low friction, which facilitates the secretion process of the mussel. Our findings reveal that the cation-π interaction modulated by salt is a key mechanism in the mussel adhesion process, providing new insights into the basic understanding of wet adhesion, self-assembly processes, and biological phenomena that are mediated by strong short-range attractive forces in water.
Mussel-inspired self-polymerized catecholamine coatings have been widely utilized as a versatile coating strategy that can be applied to a variety of substrates. For the first time, nanomechanical measurements and an evaluation of the contribution of primary amine groups to poly(catecholamine) coatings have been conducted using a surface-forces apparatus. The adhesive strength between the poly(catecholamine) layers is 30-times higher than that of a poly(catechol) coating. The origin of the strong attraction between the poly(catecholamine) layers is probably due to surface salt displacement by the primary amine, π-π stacking (the quadrupole-quadrupole interaction of indolic crosslinks), and cation-π interactions (the monopole-quadrupole interaction between positively charged amine groups and the indolic crosslinks). The contribution of the primary amine group to the catecholamine coating is vital for the design and development of mussel-inspired catechol-based coating materials.
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