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Fluorescence resonance energy transfer

 

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Fluorescence resonance energy transfer



 
 
Förster resonance energy transfer (abbreviated FRET), also known as fluorescence resonance energy transfer, resonance energy transfer (RET) or electronic energy transfer (EET), is a mechanism describing energy transfer between two chromophore
Chromophore

A chromophore is part of a molecule responsible for its color.When a molecule absorbs certain wavelengths of visible spectrum and transmits or reflects others, the molecule has a color....
s.

A donor chromophore, intially in its electronic excited state, may transfer energy to an acceptor chromophore (in close proximity, typically <10nm) through nonradiative dipole
Dipole

In physics, there are two kinds of dipoles :*An electric dipole is a separation of positive and negative charge. The simplest example of this is a pair of electric charges of equal magnitude but opposite sign, separated by some, usually small, distance....
-dipole coupling.






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Förster resonance energy transfer (abbreviated FRET), also known as fluorescence resonance energy transfer, resonance energy transfer (RET) or electronic energy transfer (EET), is a mechanism describing energy transfer between two chromophore
Chromophore

A chromophore is part of a molecule responsible for its color.When a molecule absorbs certain wavelengths of visible spectrum and transmits or reflects others, the molecule has a color....
s.

A donor chromophore, intially in its electronic excited state, may transfer energy to an acceptor chromophore (in close proximity, typically <10nm) through nonradiative dipole
Dipole

In physics, there are two kinds of dipoles :*An electric dipole is a separation of positive and negative charge. The simplest example of this is a pair of electric charges of equal magnitude but opposite sign, separated by some, usually small, distance....
-dipole coupling. This mechanism is termed "Förster resonance energy transfer" and is named after the German scientist Theodor Förster. When both chromophores are fluorescent, the term "fluorescence resonance energy transfer" is often used instead, although the energy is not actually transferred by fluorescence
Fluorescence

Fluorescence is a luminescence that is mostly found as an optical phenomenon in cold bodies, in which the molecular absorption of a photon triggers the emission of a photon with a longer wavelength....
., In order to avoid an erroneous interpretation of the phenomenon that (even when occurring between two fluorescent chromophores) is always a nonradiative transfer of energy, the name "Förster resonance energy transfer" is preferred to "fluorescence resonance energy transfer" - although the latter enjoys common usage in scientific literature. FRET is analogous to Near Field Communication
Near Field Communication

Near Field Communication or NFC, is a short-range high frequency wireless communication technology which enables the exchange of data between devices over about a 10 centimetre distance....
, in that the radius of interaction is much smaller than the wavelength
Light

Light, or visible light, is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength that is Visible spectrum to the human eye , or up to 380?750 nm. In the broader field of physics, light is sometimes used to refer to electromagnetic radiation of all wavelengths, whether visible or not....
 of light emitted. In the near field
Near field

Near field may refer to:*Near-field , an algebraic structure*Near and far field, part of an electromagnetic field...
 region, the excited chromophore emits a virtual photon
Photon

In physics, the photon is an elementary particle, the quantum of the electromagnetic field and the basic unit of light and all other forms of electromagnetic radiation....
 that is instantly absorbed by a receiving chromophore. These virtual photons are undetectable, since their existence violates the conservation of energy and momentum, and hence FRET is known as a radiationless mechanism. From quantum electrodynamical
Quantum electrodynamics

Quantum electrodynamics is a relativity theory quantum field theory of electrodynamics. QED was developed by a number of physicists, beginning in the late 1920s....
 calculations, it is determined that radiationless (FRET) and radiative energy transfer
Radiative transfer

Radiative transfer is the physical phenomenon of energy transfer in the form of electromagnetic radiation. The propagation of radiation through a medium is affected by Absorption , Emission and scattering processes....
 are the short- and long-range asymptotes of a single unified mechanism.,

Theoretical basis

The FRET efficiency is the quantum yield of the energy transfer transition, i.e. the fraction of energy transfer event occurring per donor excitation event:



where is the rate of energy transfer, the radiative decay rate and the are the rate constants of any other de-excitation pathway.

The FRET efficiency depends on many parameters that can be grouped as follows:

  • The distance between the donor and the acceptor
  • The spectral overlap of the donor emission spectrum
    Emission spectrum

    The emission spectrum of an Chemical element or Chemical compound is the relative intensity of electromagnetic radiation of each frequency Emission by atoms or molecules of that element or compound when they are excited....
     and the acceptor absorption spectrum
    Absorption spectrum

    A material's absorption spectrum shows the fraction of incident electromagnetic radiation absorption by the material over a range of frequencies....
    .
  • The relative orientation of the donor emission dipole moment and the acceptor absorption dipole moment.


depends on the donor-to-acceptor separation distance with an inverse 6th power law due to the dipole-dipole coupling mechanism:
with being the Förster distance of this pair of donor and acceptor at which the FRET efficiency is 50%. The Förster distance depends on the overlap integral
Integral

Integration is an important concept in mathematics, specifically in the field of calculus and, more broadly, mathematical analysis. Given a function ƒ of a Real number variable x and an interval [ab] of the real line, the integral...
 of the donor emission spectrum with the acceptor absorption spectrum and their mutual molecular orientation as expressed by the following equation:
where is the fluorescence quantum yield
Quantum yield

The quantum yield of a radiation-induced process is the number of times that a defined event occurs per photon absorbed by the system. Thus, the quantum yield is a measure of the efficiency with which absorbed light produces some effect....
 of the donor in the absence of the acceptor, is the dipole orientation factor, is the refractive index
Refractive index

The refractive index of a medium is a measure for how much the speed of light is reduced inside the medium. For example, typical soda-lime glass has a refractive index of 1.5, which means that in glass, light travels at times the speed of light in a vacuum....
 of the medium, is Avogadro's_number
Avogadro's number

The Avogadro constant , also called Avogadro's number, is the number of "elementary entities" in one mole , that is , the number of atoms in exactly 12 grams of carbon-12....
, and is the spectral overlap integral calculated as
where is the normalized donor emission spectrum, and is the acceptor molar extinction coefficient. ?2 =2/3 is often assumed. This value is obtained when both dyes are freely rotating and can be considered to be isotropically oriented during the excited state lifetime. If either dye is fixed or not free to rotate, then ?2 =2/3 will not be a valid assumption. In most cases, however, even modest reorientation of the dyes results in enough orientational averaging that ?2 = 2/3 does not result in a large error in the estimated energy transfer distance due to the sixth power dependence of R0 on ?2. Even when ?2 is quite different from 2/3 the error can be associated with a shift in R0 and thus determinations of changes in relative distance for a particular system are still valid. Fluorescent proteins do not reorient on a timescale that is faster than their fluorescence lifetime. In this case 0 = ?2 = 4.

The FRET efficiency relates to the quantum yield and the fluorescence lifetime of the donor molecule as follows:
where and are the donor fluorescence lifetimes in the presence and absence of an acceptor, respectively, or as
where and are the donor fluorescence intensities with and without an acceptor, respectively.

Methods

In fluorescence microscopy
Microscopy

Microscopy is the technical field of using microscopes to view samples or objects. There are three well-known branches of microscopy, optical microscopy, electron microscopy and scanning probe microscopy....
, fluorescence confocal laser scanning microscopy
Confocal laser scanning microscopy

Confocal laser scanning microscopy is a technique for obtaining high- optical images. The key feature of confocal microscopy is its ability to produce in-focus images of thick specimens, a process known as optical sectioning....
, as well as in molecular biology
Molecular biology

Molecular biology is the study of biology at a molecule level. The field overlaps with other areas of biology and chemistry, particularly genetics and biochemistry....
, FRET is a useful tool to quantify molecular dynamics in biophysics
Biophysics

Biophysics is an interdisciplinary science that employs and develops theories and methods of the physical sciences for the investigation of biology systems....
 and biochemistry
Biochemistry

Biochemistry is the study of the chemistry processes in living organisms. It deals with the structure and function of cellular components such as proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, nucleic acids and other biomolecules....
, such as protein
Protein

Proteins are organic compounds made of amino acids arranged in a linear chain and joined together by peptide bonds between the carboxyl and amino groups of adjacent amino acid Residue ....
-protein interactions, protein-DNA
DNA

Deoxyribonucleic acid is a nucleic acid that contains the genetics instructions used in the development and functioning of all known living organisms and some viruses....
 interactions, and protein conformational changes. For monitoring the complex formation between two molecules, one of them is labeled with a donor and the other with an acceptor, and these fluorophore
Fluorophore

A fluorophore, in analogy to a chromophore, is a component of a molecule which causes a molecule to be fluorescent. It is a functional group in a molecule which will absorb energy of a specific wavelength and re-emit energy at a different wavelength....
-labeled molecules are mixed. When they are dissociated, the donor emission is detected upon the donor excitation. On the other hand, when the donor and acceptor are in proximity (1-10 nm) due to the interaction of the two molecules, the acceptor emission is predominantly observed because of the intermolecular FRET from the donor to the acceptor. For monitoring protein conformational changes, the target protein is labeled with a donor and an acceptor at two loci. When a twist or bend of the protein brings the change in the distance or relative orientation of the donor and acceptor, FRET change is observed. If a molecular interaction or a protein conformational change is dependent on ligand
Ligand

In chemistry, a ligand is either an atom, ion, or molecule that bonds to a central metal, generally involving formal donation of one or more of its electrons....
 binding, this FRET technique is applicable to fluorescent indicators for the ligand detection.

FRET studies are scalable: the extent of energy transfer is often quantified from the milliliter scale of cuvette-based experiments to the femtoliter scale of microscopy-based experiments. This quantification can be based directly (sensitized emission method) on detecting two emission channels under two different excitation conditions (primarily donor and primarily acceptor). However, for robustness reasons, FRET quantification is most often based on measuring changes in fluorescence intensity or fluorescence lifetime upon changing the experimental conditions (e.g. a microscope image of donor emission is taken with the acceptor being present. The acceptor is then bleached, such that it is incapable of accepting energy transfer and another donor emission image is acquired. A pixel-based quantification using the second equation in the theory section above is then possible.) An alternative way of temporarily deactivating the acceptor is based on its fluorescence saturation. Exploiting polarisation characteristics of light, a FRET quantification is also possible with only a single camera exposure.

CFP-YFP pairs

The most popular FRET pair for biological use is a cyan fluorescent protein (CFP)-yellow fluorescent protein
Yellow fluorescent protein

Yellow Fluorescent Protein is a genetic mutant of green fluorescent protein, derived from Aequorea victoria. Its excitation peak is 514nm and its emission peak is 527nm....
 (YFP) pair. Both are color variants of green fluorescent protein (GFP). While labeling with organic fluorescent dyes requires troublesome processes of purification, chemical modification, and intracellular injection of a host protein, GFP variants can be easily attached to a host protein by genetic engineering
Genetic engineering

Engineering There are a number of ways through which genetic engineering is accomplished. Essentially, the process has five main steps# Isolation of the genes of interest...
. By virtue of GFP variants, the use of FRET techniques for biological research is becoming more and more popular.

BRET

A limitation of FRET is the requirement for external illumination to initiate the fluorescence transfer, which can lead to background noise in the results from direct excitation of the acceptor or to photobleaching
Photobleaching

Photobleaching is the photochemical destruction of a fluorophore. In microscopy, photobleaching may complicate the observation of fluorescent molecules, since they will eventually be destroyed by the light exposure necessary to stimulate them into fluorescing....
. To avoid this drawback, Bioluminescence
Bioluminescence

Bioluminescence is the production and emission of light by a living organism as the result of a chemical reaction during which chemical energy is converted to light energy....
 Resonance Energy Transfer (or BRET) has been developed. This technique uses a bioluminescent luciferase
Luciferase

Luciferase is a generic name for enzymes commonly used in nature for bioluminescence. The most famous one is firefly luciferase from the firefly Photinus pyralis....
 (typically the luciferase from Renilla reniformis) rather than CFP to produce an initial photon emission compatible with YFP.

FRET and BRET are also the common tools in the study of biochemical reaction kinetics
Kinetics

Kinetics, derived from the Greek language word ????s?? meaning movement or the act of moving, may refer to:...
 and molecular motors
Molecular motors

Molecular motors are biological molecular machines that are the essential agents of movement in living organisms. Generally speaking, a motor may be defined as a device that consumes energy in one form and converts it into motion or Mechanical work; for example, many protein-based molecular motors harness the chemical Gibbs free energy releas...
.

Photobleaching FRET

FRET efficiencies can also be inferred from the photobleaching
Photobleaching

Photobleaching is the photochemical destruction of a fluorophore. In microscopy, photobleaching may complicate the observation of fluorescent molecules, since they will eventually be destroyed by the light exposure necessary to stimulate them into fluorescing....
 rates of the donor in the presence and absence of an acceptor. This method can be performed on most fluorescence microscopes; one simply shines the excitation light (of a frequency that will excite the donor but not the acceptor significantly) on specimens with and without the acceptor fluorophore and monitors the donor fluorescence (typically separated from acceptor fluorescence using a bandpass filter) over time. The timescale is that of photobleaching, which is seconds to minutes, with fluorescence in each curve being given by

where is the photobleaching decay time constant and depends on whether the acceptor is present or not. Since photobleaching consists in the permanent inactivation of excited fluorophores, resonance energy transfer from an excited donor to an acceptor fluorophore prevents the photobleaching of that donor fluorophore, and thus high FRET efficiency leads to a longer photobleaching decay time constant:

where and are the photobleaching decay time constants of the donor in the presence and in the absence of the acceptor, respectively. (Notice that the fraction is the reciprocal of that used for lifetime measurements).

This technique was introduced by Jovin in 1989. Its use of an entire curve of points to extract the time constants can give it accuracy advantages over the other methods. Also, the fact that time measurements are over seconds rather than nanoseconds makes it easier than fluorescence lifetime measurements, and because photobleaching decay rates do not generally depend on donor concentration (unless acceptor saturation is an issue), the careful control of concentrations needed for intensity measurements is not needed. It is, however, important to keep the illumination the same for the with- and without-acceptor measurements, as photobleaching increases markedly with more intense incident light.

Other methods

A different, but related, mechanism is Dexter Electron Transfer
Dexter electron transfer

Dexter electron transfer is a method for an excited electron state to transfer from one molecule to a second . This requires a wavefunction overlap between the donor and acceptor, so can only occur at short distances; typically of the order 15-20A....
.

An alternative method to detecting protein-protein proximity is BiFC where two halves of a YFP are fused to a protein (Hu, Kerppola et al. 2002). When these two halves meet they form a fluorophore after about 60 s - 1 hr.

Applications

FRET has been applied in an experimental method for the detection of phosgene
Phosgene

Phosgene is the chemical compound with the chemical formula COCl2. This colorless gas gained infamy as a chemical weapon during World War I, but it is also a valued industrial reagent and building block in organic synthesis....
. In it, phosgene or rather triphosgene
Triphosgene

Triphosgene is a chemical compound that is used as a substitute for phosgene, because at room temperature it is a solid crystal, as opposed to phosgene which is a gas....
 as a safe substitute serves as a linker between an acceptor and a donor coumarine (forming urea
Urea

Urea is an organic compound with the chemical formula 2carbonoxygen.Urea is also known by the International Nonproprietary Name carbamide, as established by the World Health Organization....
 groups). The presence of phosgene is detected at 5x10-5M
Concentration

In chemistry, concentration is the measure of how much of a given chemical substance there is mixed with another substance. This can apply to any sort of chemical mixture, but most frequently the concept is limited to homogeneous solutions, where it refers to the amount of solute in the solvent....
 with a typical FRET emission at 464 nm.

MISTAKE: The chromophore on the right must be also coumarine (double bond is missing)


FRET is also used to study lipid rafts in cell membranes.

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