Diheteroarylethenes as Thermally Stable Photoswitchable Acceptors in Photochromic Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (pcFRET)
Top Cited Papers
- 1 June 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Vol. 124 (25) , 7481-7489
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja016969k
Abstract
We have employed diheteroarylethenes as acceptors for photochromic FRET (pcFRET), a technique introduced for the quantitative determination of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). In pcFRET, the fluorescent emission of the donor is modulated by cyclical transformations of a photochromic acceptor. Light induces a reversible change in the structure and, concomitantly, in the absorption properties of the acceptor. Only the closed forms of the selected diheteroarylethenes 2a and 2b have an absorption band overlapping the emission band of the donor, 1. The corresponding variation in the overlap integral (and thus critical transfer distance Ro) between the two states provides the means for reversibly switching the process of FRET on and off, allowing direct and repeated evaluation of the relative changes in the donor fluorescence quantum yield. The diheteroarylethenes demonstrate excellent stability in aqueous media, an absence of thermal back reactions, and negligible fatigue. The equilibration of these systems after exposure to near-UV or visible light follows simple monoexponential kinetics. We developed a general conceptual scheme for such coupled photochromic-FRET reactions, allowing quantitative interpretations of the photostationary and kinetic data, from which the quantum yields for the cyclization and cycloreversion reactions of the photochromic acceptor were calculated.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studying protein dynamics in living cellsNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2001
- Imaging biochemistry inside cellsTrends in Cell Biology, 2001
- Imaging FRET between spectrally similar GFP molecules in single cellsNature Biotechnology, 2001
- Watching Proteins in the Wild: Fluorescence Methods to Study Protein Dynamics in Living CellsTraffic, 2000
- The renaissance of fluorescence resonance energy transfer.Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 2000
- Studies of signal transduction events using chimeras to green fluorescent proteinPublished by Elsevier ,2000
- Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy: spatial resolution of biochemical processes in the cellTrends in Cell Biology, 1999
- Application of fluorescence resonance energy transfer in the clinical laboratory: Routine and researchCytometry, 1998
- Quantitative Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer Measurements Using Fluorescence MicroscopyBiophysical Journal, 1998
- 10th Spiers Memorial Lecture. Transfer mechanisms of electronic excitationDiscussions of the Faraday Society, 1959