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A class of peptides from the bombolitin family, not previously identified for nitroaromatic recognition, allows near-infrared fluorescent single-walled carbon nanotubes to transduce specific changes in their conformation. In response to the binding of specific nitroaromatic species, such peptide-nanotube complexes form a virtual "chaperone sensor," which reports modulation of the peptide secondary structure via changes in single-walled carbon nanotubes, near-infrared photoluminescence. A split-channel microscope constructed to image quantized spectral wavelength shifts in real time, in response to nitroaromatic adsorption, results in the first single-nanotube imaging of solvatochromic events. The described indirect detection mechanism, as well as an additional exciton quenching-based optical nitroaromatic detection method, illustrate that functionalization of the carbon nanotube surface can result in completely unique sites for recognition, resolvable at the single-molecule level.[on SciFinder (R)]
Ardemis Anoush Boghossian, Melania Reggente, Niloufar Sharif, Sayyed Hashem Sajjadi, Shang-Jung Wu
Ardemis Anoush Boghossian, Melania Reggente, Benjamin Paul Johanès Gabriel Lambert, Mohammed Mouhib, Charlotte Elisabeth Marie Roullier, Alice Judith Gillen, Alessandra Antonucci, Vitalijs Zubkovs, Nils Schürgers
Jürgen Brugger, Giovanni Boero, Nergiz Sahin Solmaz