Single-molecule FRET

Single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (or smFRET) is a biophysical technique used to measure distances at the 1-10 nanometer scale in single molecules, typically biomolecules. It is an application of FRET wherein a single donor and acceptor FRET pairs are excited and detected.

Methodology

Single molecule FRET measurements are typically performed on fluorescence microscopes, either using surface-immobilized or freely-diffusing molecules. In surface-immobilized experiments, biomolecules labeled with fluorescent tags are bound to the surface of the coverglass and images of fluorescence are acquired (typically by a CCD or scientific CMOS cameras). In freely-diffusing experiments, the same biomolecules are free to diffuse in solution while being excited by a small excitation volume (usually a diffraction-limited spot). In freely-diffusing experiments, bursts of photons due a single-molecule crossing the excitation spot are acquired with SPAD detectors.

Single FRET pairs are illuminated using intense light sources, typically lasers, in order to generate sufficient fluorescence signal to enable single molecule detection. Wide-field microscopy is typically combined with TIR illumination. This selectively excites FRET pairs on the surface of the measurement chamber and rejects noise from the bulk of the sample. Confocal microscopy minimizes background by focusing the fluorescence light onto a pinhole to reject out of focus light. The confocal volume has a diameter of around 220 nm, and therefore it must be scanned across the sample in order to generate an image. However, it is possible to measure much deeper into the sample than when using TIR. Fluorescence signal is detected either using ultra sensitive CCD or scientific CMOS cameras for wide field microscopy or SPADs for confocal microscopy.

For surface-immobilized experiments, data collection with cameras will produce movies of the specimen which must be processed to derive the single molecule intensities with time. Conversely, measurements employing SPADs can acquire photon timestamps and therefore more directly yield timetraces of intensity vs. time. Once the single molecule intensities vs. time are available the FRET efficiency can be computed for each FRET pair as a function of time and thereby it is possible to follow kinetic events on the single molecule scale and to build FRET histograms showing the distribution of states in each molecule. However, data from many FRET pairs must be recorded and combined in order to obtain general information about a sample.[1]

About

One benefit of studying distances in single molecules (rather than in ensembles) is that heterogeneous or dynamic biological processes can be studied without averaging. smFRET also provides dynamic temporal resolution of an individual molecule that cannot be accomplished through ensemble FRET measurements.

smFRET can also be used to study the conformations of freely diffusing macromolecules on surfaces.[2]

References

  1. Ha T, Enderle T, Ogletree DF, Chemla DS, Selvin PR, Weiss S (June 1996). "Probing the interaction between two single molecules: fluorescence resonance energy transfer between a single donor and a single acceptor". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 93 (13): 6264–8. doi:10.1073/pnas.93.13.6264. PMC 39010. PMID 8692803.
  2. Kastantin, M.; Schwartz, D. K., Connecting Rare DNA Conformations and Surface Dynamics Using Single-Molecule Resonance Energy Transfer. Acs Nano 2011, 5 (12), 9861-9869.

External links


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