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Emission Probes and Labels

Lanthanide chelates also can be used in FRET applications with other fluorescent probes and labels (Figure 9.51). In this application, the time-resolved (TR) nature of lanthanide luminescent measurements can be combined with the ability to tune the emission characteristics through energy transfer to an organic fluor (Comley, 2006). TR-FRET, as it is called, is a powerful method to develop rapid assays with low background fluorescence and high sensitivity, which can equal the detection capability of enzyme assays (Selvin, 2000). [Pg.477]

A fourth approach to evaluating the intactness of dopamine and/or serotonin neurons in human subjects who have taken one of the amphetamine analogs might be to use a probe for labeling a constituent of those neurons in position emission tomography scanning studies. A label for the serotonin or dopamine uptake carrier, or a label for tryptophan hydroxylase or tyrosine... [Pg.349]

An increase in sensitivity and reliability of chip analysis can also be achieved by using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). For this purpose both the probe and the target are labeled with a fluorophor. When the emission spectrum of the donor, e.g. Cy5, overlaps with the absorption spectrum of the acceptor, e.g. Cy5.5, and the donor and the acceptor are at a certain distance from each other, energy is transferred from the donor to the acceptor on excitation of the donor fluorophor. [Pg.494]

BODIPY fluorophores are a class of probes based on the fused, multi-ring structure, 4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene (Figure 9.27) (Invitrogen) (U.S. patent 4,774,339). This fundamental molecule can be modified, particularly at its 1, 3, 5, 7, and 8 carbon positions, to produce new fluorophores with different characteristics. The modifications cause spectral shifts in its excitation and emission wavelengths, and can provide sites for chemical coupling to label biomolecules. [Pg.440]

Direct labeling of a biomolecule involves the introduction of a covalently linked fluorophore in the nucleic acid sequence or in the amino acid sequence of a protein or antibody. Fluorescein, rhodamine derivatives, the Alexa, and BODIPY dyes (Molecular Probes [92]) as well as the cyanine dyes (Amersham Biosciences [134]) are widely used labels. These probe families show different absorption and emission wavelengths and span the whole visible spectrum (e.g., Alexa Fluor dyes show UV excitation at 350 nm to far red excitation at 633 nm). Furthermore, for differential expression analysis, probe families with similar chemical structures but different spectroscopic properties are desirable, for example the cyanine dyes Cy3 and Cy5 (excitation at 548 and 646 nm, respectively). The design of fluorescent labels is still an active area of research, and various new dyes have been reported that differ in terms of decay times, wavelength, conjugatibility, and quantum yields before and after conjugation [135]. New ruthenium markers have been reported as well [136]. [Pg.74]


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