An inverted pyramidal
metasurface was designed, fabricated, and
studied at the nanoscale level for the development of a label-free
pathogen detection on a chip platform that merges nanotechnology and
surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). Based on the integration
and synergy of these ingredients, a virus immunoassay was proposed
as a relevant proof of concept for very sensitive detection of hepatitis
A virus, for the first time to our best knowledge, in a very small
volume (2 μL), without complex signal amplification, allowing
to detect a minimal virus concentration of 13 pg/mL. The proposed
work aims to develop a high-flux and high-accuracy surface-enhanced
Raman spectroscopy (SERS) nanobiosensor for the detection of pathogens
to provide an effective method for early and easy water monitoring,
which can be fast and convenient.
The development of fast and ultrasensitive methods to detect bacterial pathogens at low concentrations is of high relevance for human and animal health care and diagnostics. In this context, surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) offers the promise of a simplified, rapid, and high-sensitive detection of biomolecular interactions with several advantages over previous assay methodologies. In this work, we have conceived reproducible SERS nanosensors based on tailored multilayer octupolar nanostructures which can combine high enhancement factor and remarkable molecular selectivity. We show that coating novel multilayer octupolar metastructures with proper self-assembled monolayer (SAM) and immobilized phages can provide label-free analysis of pathogenic bacteria via SERS leading to a giant increase in SERS enhancement. The strong relative intensity changes of about 2100% at the maximum scattered SERS wavelength, induced by the Brucella bacterium captured, demonstrate the performance advantages of the bacteriophage sensing scheme. We performed measurements at the single-cell level thus allowing fast identification in less than an hour without any demanding sample preparation process. Our results based on designing well-controlled octupolar coupling platforms open up new opportunities toward the use of bacteriophages as recognition elements for the creation of SERS-based multifunctional biochips for rapid culture and label-free detection of bacteria.
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