RESUMO
The quenching of fluorescence (up to 98%) by anti-fluorescein antibodies is well documented in the literature. Here we report a system where, instead of quenching, bifluorophoric molecules are designed to increase in fluorescence upon binding by an anti-fluorescein antibody. Bifluorophoric molecules are made of fluorescein (F) linked to tetramethylrhodamine (T) via varying numbers of methylene units, denoted as F-(CH(2))(n)-T. These F-(CH(2))(n)-T conjugates are almost nonfluorescent when free in solution due to intramolecular dimerization and stacking. Upon binding to an anti-fluorescein antibody, however, up to 110-fold increase in fluorescence was observed from the rhodamine moiety. This increase is believed to result from intramolecular dimer dissociation that dequenches the rhodamine fluorescence. Fluorescein fluorescence, on the other hand, remains quenched due to binding and intramolecular resonance energy transfer. Moreover, the excitation wavelength was at the absorption maxima of fluorescein, giving a Stoke's shift of about 90 nm. This system couples directly molecular recognition with a concurrent increase in fluorescence emission, obviating wash and incubation steps required by most assays. It is an important molecular reporter system for developing homogeneous assays.