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Long-Lived Bright Red Emitting Azaoxa-Triangulenium Fluorophores

The fluorescence lifetimes of most red emitting organic probes are under 4 nanoseconds, which is a limiting factor in studying interactions and conformational dynamics of macromolecules. In addition, the nanosecond background autofluorescence is a significant interference during fluorescence measure...

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Autores principales: Maliwal, Badri P., Fudala, Rafal, Raut, Sangram, Kokate, Rutika, Sørensen, Thomas J., Laursen, Bo W., Gryczynski, Zygmunt, Gryczynski, Ignacy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3646960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23667570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063043
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author Maliwal, Badri P.
Fudala, Rafal
Raut, Sangram
Kokate, Rutika
Sørensen, Thomas J.
Laursen, Bo W.
Gryczynski, Zygmunt
Gryczynski, Ignacy
author_facet Maliwal, Badri P.
Fudala, Rafal
Raut, Sangram
Kokate, Rutika
Sørensen, Thomas J.
Laursen, Bo W.
Gryczynski, Zygmunt
Gryczynski, Ignacy
author_sort Maliwal, Badri P.
collection PubMed
description The fluorescence lifetimes of most red emitting organic probes are under 4 nanoseconds, which is a limiting factor in studying interactions and conformational dynamics of macromolecules. In addition, the nanosecond background autofluorescence is a significant interference during fluorescence measurements in cellular environment. Therefore, red fluorophores with longer lifetimes will be immensely helpful. Azaoxa-triangulenium fluorophores ADOTA and DAOTA are red emitting small organic molecules with high quantum yield, long fluorescence lifetime and high limiting anisotropy. In aqueous environment, ADOTA and DAOTA absorption and emission maxima are respectively 540 nm and 556 nm, and 556 nm and 589 nm. Their emission extends beyond 700 nm. Both probes have the limiting anisotropy between 0.36–0.38 at their absorption peak. In both protic and aprotic solvents, their lifetimes are around 20 ns, making them among the longest-lived red emitting organic fluorophores. Upon labeling of avidin, streptavidin and immunoglobulin their absorption and fluorescence are red-shifted. Unlike in free form, the protein-conjugated probes have heterogeneous fluorescence decays, with the presence of both significantly quenched and unquenched populations. Despite the presence of significant local motions due to a flexible trimethylene linker, we successfully measured both intermediate nanosecond intra-protein motions and slower rotational correlation times approaching 100 ns. Their long lifetimes are unaffected by the cell membrane (hexadecyl-ADOTA) and the intra-cellular (DAOTA-Arginine) localization. Their long lifetimes also enabled successful time-gating of the cellular autofluorescence resulting in background-free fluorescence lifetime based images. ADOTA and DAOTA retain a long fluorescence lifetime when free, as protein conjugate, in membranes and inside the cell. Our successful measurements of intermediate nanosecond internal motions and long correlations times of large proteins suggest that these probes will be highly useful to study slower intra-molecular motions and interactions among macromolecules. The fluorescence lifetime facilitated gating of cellular nanosecond autofluorescence should be of considerable help in in vitro and in vivo applications.
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spelling pubmed-36469602013-05-10 Long-Lived Bright Red Emitting Azaoxa-Triangulenium Fluorophores Maliwal, Badri P. Fudala, Rafal Raut, Sangram Kokate, Rutika Sørensen, Thomas J. Laursen, Bo W. Gryczynski, Zygmunt Gryczynski, Ignacy PLoS One Research Article The fluorescence lifetimes of most red emitting organic probes are under 4 nanoseconds, which is a limiting factor in studying interactions and conformational dynamics of macromolecules. In addition, the nanosecond background autofluorescence is a significant interference during fluorescence measurements in cellular environment. Therefore, red fluorophores with longer lifetimes will be immensely helpful. Azaoxa-triangulenium fluorophores ADOTA and DAOTA are red emitting small organic molecules with high quantum yield, long fluorescence lifetime and high limiting anisotropy. In aqueous environment, ADOTA and DAOTA absorption and emission maxima are respectively 540 nm and 556 nm, and 556 nm and 589 nm. Their emission extends beyond 700 nm. Both probes have the limiting anisotropy between 0.36–0.38 at their absorption peak. In both protic and aprotic solvents, their lifetimes are around 20 ns, making them among the longest-lived red emitting organic fluorophores. Upon labeling of avidin, streptavidin and immunoglobulin their absorption and fluorescence are red-shifted. Unlike in free form, the protein-conjugated probes have heterogeneous fluorescence decays, with the presence of both significantly quenched and unquenched populations. Despite the presence of significant local motions due to a flexible trimethylene linker, we successfully measured both intermediate nanosecond intra-protein motions and slower rotational correlation times approaching 100 ns. Their long lifetimes are unaffected by the cell membrane (hexadecyl-ADOTA) and the intra-cellular (DAOTA-Arginine) localization. Their long lifetimes also enabled successful time-gating of the cellular autofluorescence resulting in background-free fluorescence lifetime based images. ADOTA and DAOTA retain a long fluorescence lifetime when free, as protein conjugate, in membranes and inside the cell. Our successful measurements of intermediate nanosecond internal motions and long correlations times of large proteins suggest that these probes will be highly useful to study slower intra-molecular motions and interactions among macromolecules. The fluorescence lifetime facilitated gating of cellular nanosecond autofluorescence should be of considerable help in in vitro and in vivo applications. Public Library of Science 2013-05-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3646960/ /pubmed/23667570 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063043 Text en © 2013 Maliwal et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Maliwal, Badri P.
Fudala, Rafal
Raut, Sangram
Kokate, Rutika
Sørensen, Thomas J.
Laursen, Bo W.
Gryczynski, Zygmunt
Gryczynski, Ignacy
Long-Lived Bright Red Emitting Azaoxa-Triangulenium Fluorophores
title Long-Lived Bright Red Emitting Azaoxa-Triangulenium Fluorophores
title_full Long-Lived Bright Red Emitting Azaoxa-Triangulenium Fluorophores
title_fullStr Long-Lived Bright Red Emitting Azaoxa-Triangulenium Fluorophores
title_full_unstemmed Long-Lived Bright Red Emitting Azaoxa-Triangulenium Fluorophores
title_short Long-Lived Bright Red Emitting Azaoxa-Triangulenium Fluorophores
title_sort long-lived bright red emitting azaoxa-triangulenium fluorophores
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3646960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23667570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063043
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