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Quantitative Determination of Dark Chromophore Population Explains the Apparent Low Quantum Yield of Red Fluorescent Proteins

Authors :
Laura van Weeren
Christian Blum
Jente Stouthamer
Daphne S. Bindels
Vinod Subramaniam
Theodorus W. J. Gadella
Jord C. Prangsma
Robert Molenaar
Lindsay Haarbosch
Willem L. Vos
Molecular Cytology (SILS, FNWI)
Nanobiophysics
Complex Photonic Systems
Source :
The journal of Physical Chemistry. B, 124(8), 1383-1391. American Chemical Society, The Journal of physical chemistry B, 124(8), 1383-1391. American Chemical Society, The Journal of Physical Chemistry. B
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2020.

Abstract

The fluorescence quantum yield of four representative red fluorescent proteins mCherry, mKate2, mRuby2, and the recently introduced mScarlet was investigated. The excited state lifetimes were measured as a function of the distance to a gold mirror in order to control the local density of optical states (LDOS). By analyzing the total emission rates as a function of the LDOS, we obtain separately the emission rate and the nonradiative rate of the bright states. We thus obtain for the first time the bright state quantum yield of the proteins without interference from dark, nonemitting states. The bright state quantum yields are considerably higher than previously reported quantum yields that average over both bright and dark states. We determine that mCherry, mKate2, and mRuby2 have a considerable fraction of dark chromophores up to 45%, which explains both the low measured quantum yields of red emitting proteins reported in the literature and the difficulties in developing high quantum yield variants of such proteins. For the recently developed bright mScarlet, we find a much smaller dark fraction of 14%, accompanied by a very high quantum yield of the bright state of 81%. The presence of a considerable fraction of dark chromophores has implications for numerous applications of fluorescent proteins, ranging from quantitative fluorescence microscopy to FRET studies to monitoring protein expression levels. We recommend that future optimization of red fluorescent proteins should pay more attention to minimizing the fraction of dark proteins.

Details

ISSN :
15205207 and 15206106
Volume :
124
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cad0e66dc22d8c7cbe52819b9650c8bc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b10396