Exploiting Long-Lived Molecular Fluorescence

Authors

  • Werner M. Nau
  • Fang Huang
  • Xiaojuan Wang
  • Huseyin Bakirci
  • Gabriela Gramlich
  • Cesar Marquez

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2533/000942903777679424

Keywords:

Azoalkanes, Fluorescence, Kinetics, Photochemistry, Peptides

Abstract

Fluorophores based on the azo chromophore 2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-ene, referred to as fluorazophores, display an exceedingly long fluorescence lifetime. Besides the use in time-resolved screening assays, where the long-lived fluorescence can be time-gated, thereby improving the signal to background ratio, a distinct application of fluorazophores lies in the area of biopolymer dynamics. For this purpose, one chain end is labeled with a fluorazophore and the other one with an efficient fluorescence quencher. The fluorescence lifetime of the probe/quencher-labeled peptide then reflects the kinetics of intramolecular end-to-end collision. Applications to polypeptides are described and control experiments which establish the nature of the quenching mechanism as a diffusive process requiring intimate probe/quencher contact are described.

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Published

2003-04-01

How to Cite

[1]
W. M. Nau, F. Huang, X. Wang, H. Bakirci, G. Gramlich, C. Marquez, Chimia 2003, 57, 161, DOI: 10.2533/000942903777679424.