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1.
Chemphyschem ; 7(7): 1442-54, 2006 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16739159

ABSTRACT

Using fluorescence lifetime microspectroscopy and imaging techniques, we have studied the fluorescence of cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) transiently expressed in HEK-293 cells, in the presence or absence of its fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) partner, yellow fluorescent protein (YFP). When the two proteins are attached through a 27-amino-acid linker, a 33 % average efficiency of intramolecular energy transfer is accurately determined inside the cell. Additionally, we observe a systematic quenching of the CFP fluorescence with increasing levels of protein expression. This quenching cannot be accounted for by formation of the previously described dimer of GFP-related proteins, since its magnitude is unchanged when the fluorescent proteins carry the mutation A206K shown to dissociate this dimer in vitro. Even when the intracellular protein concentration largely exceeds the in vitro dissociation constant of the dimer, self-association remains undetectable, either between free proteins or intramolecularly within the CFP-YFP construct. Instead, the detailed concentration effects are satisfactorily accounted for by a model of intermolecular, concentration-dependent energy transfer, arising from molecular proximity and crowding. In the case of CFP alone, we suggest that self-quenching could result from a pseudo-homo FRET mechanism between different, spectrally shifted emissive forms of the protein. These phenomena require careful consideration in intracellular FRET studies.


Subject(s)
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer/methods , Green Fluorescent Proteins/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Biophysics/methods , Cell Line , Chemistry, Physical/methods , Cytoplasm/metabolism , Dimerization , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer/instrumentation , Humans , Luminescent Proteins/chemistry , Microscopy, Confocal , Molecular Conformation , Mutation
2.
J Phys Chem B ; 109(50): 24121-33, 2005 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16375404

ABSTRACT

The dynamics and electronic absorption spectrum of enhanced cyan fluorescent protein (ECFP), a mutant of green fluorescent protein (GFP), have been studied by means of a 1 ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. The two X-ray conformations A' and B' of ECFP were considered. The chromophore was assumed to be neutral, and all titratable residues were taken in their standard protonation state at neutral pH. The protein was embedded in a box of water molecules (and counterions). The first result is that the two conformations A' and B' are found to be stable all along the simulation. Then, an analysis of the hydrogen-bond networks shows strong differences between the two conformations in the surroundings of the nitrogen atom of the indolic part of the chromophore. This is partly due to the imperfection in the beta barrel near the His148 residue, which allows the access of one solvent molecule inside the protein in conformation A'. Finally, quantum mechanical calculations of the electronic transition energies of the chromophore in the charge cloud of the protein and solvent water molecules were performed using the TDDFT method on 160 snapshots extracted every 5 ps of the MD trajectories. It is found that conformations A' and B' exhibit very similar spectra despite different H-bond networks involving the chromophore. This similarity is related to the weak charge transfer involved in the electronic transition and the weak electrostatic field created by ECFP near the chromophore, within the hypotheses made in the present simulation.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Green Fluorescent Proteins/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydrogen Bonding , Molecular Conformation , Protein Conformation , Quantum Theory , Sensitivity and Specificity , Spectrophotometry/methods
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