Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (or Förster resonance energy transfer) describes an energy transfer mechanism between two fluorescent molecules. A fluorescent donor is excited at its specific fluorescence excitation wavelength. By a long-range dipole-dipole coupling mechanism, this excited state is then nonradiatively transferred to a second molecule, the acceptor. The donor returns to the electronic ground state. The described energy transfer mechanism is termed "Förster resonance energy transfer" (FRET), named after the German scientist Theodor Förster. When both molecules are fluorescent, the term "fluorescence resonance energy transfer" is often used, although the energy is not actually transferred by fluorescence.
The FRET efficiency , which is defined as
The most popular FRET pair for biological use is a cyan fluorescent protein (CFP)-yellow fluorescent protein (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. By virtue of GFP variants, the use of FRET techniques for biological research is becoming more and more popular.
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 photobleaching. To overcome this difficulty, Bioluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (or BRET) has been developed. This technique uses a bioluminescent luciferase (typically purified from Renilla Luciformis) rather than CFP to produce an initial photon emission compatible with YFP.
FRET and BRET are also a common tools in the study of reaction kinetics and molecular motors.
A different, but related, mechanism is the energy transfer of Dexter type.
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 60s - 1 hr.
FRET can be quantified in cuvette based experiments or in microscopy images on a pixel by pixel basis. This quantification can be based directly (sesitized 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.
biochemistry | cell imaging | Molecular biology
FRET | Transfert d'énergie entre molécules fluorescentes | Förster Resonance Energy Transfer
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"Fluorescence resonance energy transfer".
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