Buffl

Biophysik

MS
von Michael S.

Fluorescence Recovery after Photobleaching (FRAP)


= experimental technique to study the movement and dynamics of molecules within living cells


Principle of FRAP

  1. Fluorescence Labeling: Molecules of interest within a cell or a biological sample are tagged with a fluorescent marker. This can be achieved using fluorescent proteins (like GFP) or fluorescent dyes

  2. Photobleaching: A specific region of the sample is subjected to a high-intensity laser beam, which causes the fluorescent molecules in that area to lose their ability to fluoresce

  3. Recovery Monitoring: After photobleaching, the sample is continuously monitored to observe the movement of non-bleached fluorescent molecules into the bleached area. The recovery of fluorescence in the bleached region is recorded over time —> Monitor the return of fluorescence in the bleached area using time-lapse microscopy

  4. Data Analysis: The rate and extent of fluorescence recovery are analyzed to derive quantitative information about molecular mobility, including diffusion coefficients and binding interactions

Applications of FRAP

  1. Membrane Dynamics: Studying the lateral mobility of proteins and lipids within cellular membranes.

  2. Protein-Protein Interactions: Investigating the binding and dissociation rates of protein complexes.

  3. Intracellular Transport: Analyzing the movement of organelles and vesicles within the cytoplasm.

  4. Gene Expression Studies: Understanding the dynamics of transcription factors and other nuclear proteins.

  5. Drug Discovery: Evaluating the effect of drugs on molecular mobility and interactions within cells

Advantages of FRAP

  • Non-Invasive: Allows the study of live cells without disrupting their normal functions.

  • Quantitative: Provides precise measurements of molecular dynamics.

  • Versatile (Vielseitig): Can be applied to various biological systems and different types of molecules.

Limitations of FRAP

  • Photodamage: High-intensity laser used for bleaching can cause damage to the cells.

  • Complex Analysis: Data interpretation can be challenging and often requires sophisticated mathematical modeling.

  • Limited to Fluorescent Molecules: Only applicable to molecules that can be fluorescently tagged.


Fluorescent Proteins (FPs)

= a class of proteins that can absorb light at specific wavelengths and then emit it at longer wavelengths

—> Direct genetic labeling of target proteins in cells


- Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP): Originally derived from the jellyfish Aequorea victoria

- Enhanced GFP (eGFP): a brighter and more photostable variant of GFP, often used in various applications

- Red Fluorescent Proteins (RFPs): Derived from various marine organisms, these proteins emit red light —> mCherry (Discosoma species) and DsRed are popular examples



Applications of Fluorescent Proteins

  1. Live-Cell Imaging: FPs allow real-time visualization of cellular processes in living cells, tissues, and organisms. They can be used to tag proteins, organelles, and other cellular structures.

  2. Protein Localization: FPs are fused to proteins of interest to study their localization and movement within cells. This helps in understanding protein function and interactions.

  3. Gene Expression Studies: FPs can be used as reporters to monitor gene expression levels in real time. The intensity of fluorescence correlates with the activity of the promoter driving FP expression.

  4. Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET): FRET uses pairs of FPs to study protein-protein interactions, conformational changes, and other molecular events at close proximity.

  5. Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching (FRAP): As mentioned earlier, FPs are critical for FRAP experiments to study the dynamics of molecular diffusion and interactions.

  6. Super-Resolution Microscopy: Advanced imaging techniques like STORM and PALM utilize FPs to achieve resolutions beyond the diffraction limit of light microscopy.


Fluorescence Resonance Energy transfer (FRET)

= powerful spectroscopic method for measuring distances in the 2-10 nm range

—> It relies on the non-radiative transfer of energy from a donor fluorophore to an acceptor fluorophore, which occurs when the two are in close proximity (2-10 nm)

—> provide valuable information about molecular interactions, conformational changes, distances within and between proteins


Principles

  1. Energy Transfer: FRET occurs when the excited-state energy of a donor fluorophore is transferred to a nearby acceptor fluorophore through dipole-dipole coupling. This transfer is highly distance-dependent, making FRET a sensitive molecular ruler for nanoscale distances.

  2. Spectral Overlap: The emission spectrum of the donor fluorophore must overlap with the excitation spectrum of the acceptor fluorophore for efficient energy transfer.

  3. Efficiency: The efficiency of energy transfer (𝐸) is described by the Förster equation:

-> R0​ = Förster distance (the distance at which energy transfer efficiency is 50%)

-> 𝑟 = actual distance between the donor and acceptor


Where does r^6 distance from FRET come from

= comes from the physics of dipole-dipole interactions between the donor and acceptor molecules involved in the energy transfer process. The energy transfer rate is proportional to 1/r^6, which reflects the probability of the donor transferring energy to the acceptor through dipole-dipole coupling


Example

=> Recovery after Acceptor Bleaching (FRAP) => monitoring the recovery of fluorescence in the acceptor molecule after it has been photobleached, which can provide insights into molecular interactions and dynamics


=> Avoid Synchronization of Ensembles to study conformational changes => Single-molecule FRET (smFRET)

-> offers detailed insights into the heterogeneity and dynamics of molecular processes

-> Single-Molecule Sensitivity: smFRET measures FRET efficiency at the level of single molecule pairs, providing information about individual molecular events and conformational states


Alternating Laser Excitation (ALEX) spectroscopy = used in smFRET to improve the accuracy and reliability of FRET measurements

-> By alternately exciting the donor and acceptor fluorophores, ALEX allows for the direct measurement of both donor and acceptor fluorescence intensities, as well as the identification of fluorescent molecules that contain both fluorophores

-> This approach helps to distinguish (unterscheiden) between true FRET events and other fluorescent signals, such as those from donor-only or acceptor-only species


Principles of ALEX

  1. Alternating Excitation: the excitation light source alternates between two wavelengths — one that specifically excites the donor fluorophore and another that specifically excites the acceptor fluorophore. This alternation occurs rapidly, typically on the millisecond timescale

  2. FRET Efficiency Measurement: By measuring the fluorescence intensities of the donor and acceptor during their respective excitation periods, ALEX allows for precise calculation of FRET efficiency (𝐸)

  3. Stoichiometry Measurement: ALEX also provides information about the presence of donor-only, acceptor-only, and donor-acceptor (FRET-capable) species, allowing researchers to determine the labeling stoichiometry


Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy FCS



Key Principles:

FCS is based on the temporal fluctuations in fluorescence intensity that occur when fluorescently labeled molecules move in and out of a small, defined observation volume (typically created by a focused laser beam). These fluctuations are analyzed mathematically to extract information about the behavior of the molecules


FCS Measures:

  • Diffusion Dynamics: measure how fast molecules diffuse in different environments, providing insights into molecular mobility in membranes, cytoplasm

  • Molecular Concentration: By analyzing the frequency and magnitude of fluorescence fluctuations —> estimate the concentration of fluorescent molecules in the observation volume

  • Binding Interactions: detect changes in molecular diffusion rates that occur when molecules bind to one another -> studying molecular interactions: protein-protein or ligand-receptor binding

  • Molecular size or conformation changes

Steps:

  1. Fluorescent Labeling the molecules of interest (proteins, lipids, nucleic acids, etc.)

  2. Observation Volume: A laser is focused to create a tiny observation volume, typically in the nanometer range. Molecules entering or leaving this volume cause fluctuations in fluorescence intensity

  3. Data Collection: Fluctuations depend on the diffusion rate, molecule size, and interactions

  4. Correlation Function: The recorded fluctuations are analyzed using a mathematical function called the autocorrelation function, which quantifies how the intensity changes over time are correlated with themselves


Biolayer Interferometry (BLI)


+ label-free, high-throughput & cost-efficient

+ robust and compatible to crude samples

+ compatible with glass surfaces and plastic tips

- intermediate sensitivity

- minimal molecular weight (200 g/mol)

-> measure molecular interactions in real time


  1. Biosensor Tip: BLI employs a biosensor tip (a fiber optic-based sensor) coated with a biolayer (usually with an immobilized molecule such as a protein or antibody). This biosensor is then dipped into a sample solution containing the molecule of interest.

  2. Interference Pattern: When light is shone onto the biosensor tip, some of the light reflects off the surface of the biolayer, while the rest travels through the layer and reflects off an internal reference layer. The interaction between these two reflected light beams creates an interference pattern.

  3. Binding Event Detection: As molecules from the solution bind to the immobilized molecules on the biosensor surface, the thickness of the biolayer changes. This change causes a shift in the interference pattern, which is detected by the instrument and converted into real-time binding data.

  4. Association and Dissociation: The system monitors both the association phase (as the molecules bind) and the dissociation phase (as they unbind when the biosensor is moved into a blank solution).

  5. Kinetics and Affinity: The resulting data is analyzed to calculate kinetic parameters such as the association rate constant, dissociation rate constant, and the equilibrium dissociation constant, which reflects the binding affinity of the interaction.


Author

Michael S.

Informationen

Zuletzt geändert