Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The approximately linear scaling of fluorescence quantum yield (ϕ) with fluorescence lifetime (τ) in fluorescent proteins (FPs) has inspired engineering of brighter fluorophores based on screening for increased lifetimes. Several recently developed FPs such as mTurquoise2, mScarlet, and FusionRed-MQV which have become useful for live cell imaging are products of lifetime selection strategies. However, the underlying photophysical basis of the improved brightness has not been scrutinized. In this study, we focused on understanding the outcome of lifetime-based directed evolution of mCherry, which is a popular red-FP (RFP). We identified four positions (W143, I161, Q163, and I197) near the FP chromophore that can be mutated to create mCherry-XL (eXtended Lifetime: ϕ = 0.70; τ = 3.9 ns). The 3-fold higher quantum yield of mCherry-XL is on par with that of the brightest RFP to date, mScarlet. We examined selected variants within the evolution trajectory and found a near-linear scaling of lifetime with quantum yield and consistent blue-shifts of the absorption and emission spectra. We find that the improvement in brightness is primarily due to a decrease in the nonradiative decay of the excited state. In addition, our analysis revealed the decrease in nonradiative rate is not limited to the blue-shift of the energy gap and changes in the excited state reorganization energy. Our findings suggest that nonradiative mechanisms beyond the scope of energy-gap models such the Englman-Jortner model are suppressed in this lifetime evolution trajectory.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c01956DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

quantum yield
12
directed evolution
8
nonradiative decay
8
fluorescence lifetime
8
evolution trajectory
8
decrease nonradiative
8
excited state
8
lifetime
6
evolution bright
4
bright variant
4

Similar Publications

The proton (or hydrogen atom) transfer via tunneling plays a key role in chemical and biological processes. However, our understanding of multiple motion or proton concerted tunneling is very limited. Herein, we find that the weak dispersion interaction in the formic acid dimer (FAD)-fluorobenzene (PhF) system does not change the double proton transfer (DPT) barrier in FAD, but induces the FAD swing coupled with DPT.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) has emerged as a critical technology for anticounterfeiting and optical display applications due to its unique chiroptical properties. We report a multicolor CPL-emitting elastomeric film (P37/PSK@SiO-PDMS) that synergistically combines chiral helical polyacetylene (P37) and a surface-engineered perovskite (PSK@SiO) through hydrogen-bond-directed assembly. Confinement within the PDMS matrix drives P37 to self-assemble into a chiral supramolecular structure through hydrogen bonding, inducing a chiroptical inversion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The design of carbon allotropes that simultaneously exhibit mechanical robustness and quantum functionalities remains a longstanding challenge. Here, we report a comprehensive first-principles study of cT16, a three-dimensional sp-hybridized carbon network with topologically interlinked graphene-like sheets. The structure features high ideal tensile and shear strengths, with pronounced anisotropy arising from strain-induced bond rehybridization and interlayer slipping mechanisms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present a self-consistent algorithm for optimal control simulations of many-body quantum systems. The algorithm features a two-step synergism that combines discrete real-time machine learning (DRTL) with Quantum Optimal Control Theory (QOCT) using the time-dependent Schrödinger equation. Specifically, in step (1), DRTL is employed to identify a compact working space (i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We introduce an efficient method, TTN-HEOM, for exactly calculating the open quantum dynamics for driven quantum systems interacting with highly structured bosonic baths by combining the tree tensor network (TTN) decomposition scheme with the bexcitonic generalization of the numerically exact hierarchical equations of motion (HEOM). The method yields a series of quantum master equations for all core tensors in the TTN that efficiently and accurately capture the open quantum dynamics for non-Markovian environments to all orders in the system-bath interaction. These master equations are constructed based on the time-dependent Dirac-Frenkel variational principle, which isolates the optimal dynamics for the core tensors given the TTN ansatz.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF