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Optical approaches for observing the dynamics of single molecules have required pico- to nanomolar concentrations of fluorophore in order to isolate individual molecules. However, many biologically relevant processes occur at micromolar ligand concentrations, necessitating a reduction in the conventional observation volume by three orders of magnitude. We show that arrays of zero-mode waveguides consisting of subwavelength holes in a metal film provide a simple and highly parallel means for studying single-molecule dynamics at micromolar concentrations with microsecond temporal resolution. We present observations of DNA polymerase activity as an example of the effectiveness of zero-mode waveguides for performing single-molecule experiments at high concentrations.
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Michael J. Levene
Ithaca College
Jonas Korlach
Pacific Biosciences (United States)
Stephen Turner
University of Virginia
Science
Cornell University
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Levene et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a11f3c207103abb49ad05a7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1079700
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