A photoswitchable orange-to-far-red fluorescent protein, PSmOrange
Open Access
- 31 July 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Methods
- Vol. 8 (9) , 771-777
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.1664
Abstract
A fluorescent protein that can be photoswitched with visible light from orange to far-red is presented. The photoconverted form has the most red-shifted excitation peak of all GFP-like fluorescent proteins to date and should be useful for many imaging applications. We report a photoswitchable monomeric Orange (PSmOrange) protein that is initially orange (excitation, 548 nm; emission, 565 nm) but becomes far-red (excitation, 636 nm; emission, 662 nm) after irradiation with blue-green light. Compared to its parental orange proteins, PSmOrange has greater brightness, faster maturation, higher photoconversion contrast and better photostability. The red-shifted spectra of both forms of PSmOrange enable its simultaneous use with cyan-to-green photoswitchable proteins to study four intracellular populations. Photoconverted PSmOrange has, to our knowledge, the most far-red excitation peak of all GFP-like fluorescent proteins, provides diffraction-limited and super-resolution imaging in the far-red light range, is optimally excited with common red lasers, and can be photoconverted subcutaneously in a mouse. PSmOrange photoswitching occurs via a two-step photo-oxidation process, which causes cleavage of the polypeptide backbone. The far-red fluorescence of photoconverted PSmOrange results from a new chromophore containing N-acylimine with a co-planar carbon-oxygen double bond.Keywords
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