Authors: Zeid A. Nima, Meena Mahmood, Yang Xu, Thikra Mustafa, Fumiya Watanabe, Dmitry A. Nedosekin, Mazen A. Juratli, Tariq Fahmi, Ekaterina I. Galanzha, John P. Nolan, Alexei G. Basnakian, Vladimir P. Zharov, and Alexandru S. Biris
Publication: Scientific Reports, Volume 4
Abstract:
Nanotechnology has been extensively explored for cancer diagnostics. However, the specificity of current methods to identify simultaneously several cancer biomarkers is limited due to color overlapping of bio-conjugated nanoparticles. Here, we present a technique to increase both the molecular and spectral specificity of cancer diagnosis by using tunable silver-gold nanorods with narrow surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) and high photothermal contrast. The silver-gold nanorods were functionalized with four Raman-active molecules and four antibodies specific to breast cancer markers and with leukocyte-specific CD45 marker. More than two orders of magnitude of SERS signal enhancement was observed from these hybrid nanosystems compared to conventional gold nanorods. Using an antibody rainbow cocktail, we demonstrated highly specific detection of single breast cancer cells in unprocessed human blood. By integrating multiplex targeting, multicolor coding, and multimodal detection, our approach has the potential to improve multispectral imaging of individual tumor cells in complex biological environments.