Dr. Lorena Manzanares is a highly accomplished researcher specializing in Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. She completed her undergraduate studies at Santa Maria University in Caracas, Venezuela, before pursuing a Master’s in Pharmaceutical Science at Complutense University of Madrid, Spain. She earned her PhD at Complutense University in 2017 under the supervision of Professors Beatriz Lopez-Ruiz and Maria Jesus Lobo-Castanon. Following her doctoral research, Dr. Manzanares advanced her scientific career as a scientist and Marie Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for Advanced Functional Nanorobots at the University of Chemistry and Technology in the Czech Republic. In 2020, she joined the Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry at the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic as a postdoctoral researcher under the mentorship of Dr. M. Hocek. Dr. Manzanares’ work focuses on cutting-edge research in nanotechnology, pharmaceutical sciences, and organic chemistry, contributing to advancements in drug delivery systems and nanomedicine.
Talk Title: Single-molecule biosensing with MXene
A wide range of nanomaterials are used in fluorescence sensing due to their ability to quench fluorescence in a distance-dependent manner via nonradiative energy transfer. Most, including graphene and its derivatives, are typically applied in ensemble off/on assays for DNA hybridization or aptasensing, where target molecule recognition (a complementary DNA sequence or protein) results in an averaged, concentration-dependent fluorescence increase. Recently, distance-dependent energy transfer has shown promise for more quantitative applications in single-molecule biosensing, allowing nanoscale localization of single fluorescent molecules, with important implications in biophysics and structural biology. In this talk, I present our work in exploring these properties with 2D titanium carbide MXene. We used single-molecule fluorescence microscopy and DNA origami nanopositioners to investigate the distance-dependent quenching of a dye (ATTO 542) on spin-coated Ti3C2Tx MXene films. DNA origami structures precisely positioned dye molecules at specific heights, facilitated by a glycine-based immobilization chemistry. Our findings reveal a cubic distance dependence in fluorescence quenching within 1-10 nm, consistent with Förster near-field energy transfer. MXenes, therefore, present unique potential as short-distance spectroscopic nanorulers, enabling precise biomolecular measurements beyond the reach of conventional tools. Here, we demonstrate MXenes’ application in single-molecule biosensing, with a particular focus on examining nanoscale dynamics in model cell membranes.
Know4Nano
This project is funded by the European Union under Horizon Europe GA 101159710