Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging of Molecular Rotors in Living Cells

被引:11
|
作者
Suhling, Klaus [1 ]
Levitt, James A. [1 ]
Chung, Pei-Hua [1 ]
Kuimova, Marina K. [2 ]
Yahioglu, Gokhan [3 ]
机构
[1] Kings Coll London, Dept Phys, London WC2R 2LS, England
[2] Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol & Med, Dept Chem, London SW7 2AZ, England
[3] PhotoBiotics Ltd, London, England
来源
JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS | 2012年 / 60期
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会; 英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
Bioengineering; Issue; 60; fluorescence; microscopy; FLIM; fluorescent molecular rotors;
D O I
10.3791/2925
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Diffusion is often an important rate-determining step in chemical reactions or biological processes and plays a role in a wide range of intracellular events. Viscosity is one of the key parameters affecting the diffusion of molecules and proteins, and changes in viscosity have been linked to disease and malfunction at the cellular level. (1-3) While methods to measure the bulk viscosity are well developed, imaging microviscosity remains a challenge. Viscosity maps of microscopic objects, such as single cells, have until recently been hard to obtain. Mapping viscosity with fluorescence techniques is advantageous because, similar to other optical techniques, it is minimally invasive, non-destructive and can be applied to living cells and tissues. Fluorescent molecular rotors exhibit fluorescence lifetimes and quantum yields which are a function of the viscosity of their microenvironment. (4,5) Intramolecular twisting or rotation leads to non-radiative decay from the excited state back to the ground state. A viscous environment slows this rotation or twisting, restricting access to this non-radiative decay pathway. This leads to an increase in the fluorescence quantum yield and the fluorescence lifetime. Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging ( FLIM) of modified hydrophobic BODIPY dyes that act as fluorescent molecular rotors show that the fluorescence lifetime of these probes is a function of the microviscosity of their environment. (6-8) A logarithmic plot of the fluorescence lifetime versus the solvent viscosity yields a straight line that obeys the Forster Hoffman equation. (9) This plot also serves as a calibration graph to convert fluorescence lifetime into viscosity. Following incubation of living cells with the modified BODIPY fluorescent molecular rotor, a punctate dye distribution is observed in the fluorescence images. The viscosity value obtained in the puncta in live cells is around 100 times higher than that of water and of cellular cytoplasm. (6,7) Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements yield rotational correlation times in agreement with these large microviscosity values. Mapping the fluorescence lifetime is independent of the fluorescence intensity, and thus allows the separation of probe concentration and viscosity effects. In summary, we have developed a practical and versatile approach to map the microviscosity in cells based on FLIM of fluorescent molecular rotors.
引用
收藏
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Spectroscopy and fluorescence lifetime imaging in live cells of a cyano-substituted combretastatin
    Scherer, Kathrin M.
    Bisby, Roger H.
    Botchway, Stanley W.
    Greetham, Greg M.
    Hadfield, John A.
    Parker, Anthony W.
    Towrie, Mike
    BIOMEDICAL SPECTROSCOPY AND IMAGING, 2014, 3 (03) : 211 - 218
  • [22] Styryl dyes for viscosity measurement and detection of pathological processes in mitochondria of living cells using fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy, a critical study
    Efimova, Anna S.
    Ustimova, Mariya A.
    Frolova, Anastasya Yu.
    Martynov, Vladimir I.
    Deyev, Sergey M.
    Fedorov, Yury, V
    Fedorova, Olga A.
    Pakhomov, Alexey A.
    OPTICAL MATERIALS, 2025, 159
  • [23] Phasor Analysis of Fluorescence Lifetime Enables Quantitative Multiplexed Molecular Imaging of Three Probes
    Rahim, Maha K.
    Zhao, Jinghui
    Patel, Hinesh V.
    Lagouros, Hauna A.
    Kota, Rajesh
    Fernandez, Irma
    Gratton, Enrico
    Haun, Jered B.
    ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2022, 94 (41) : 14185 - 14194
  • [24] Flavin fluorescence lifetime imaging of living peripheral blood mononuclear cells on micro and nano-structured surfaces
    Teplicky, T.
    Horilova, J.
    Bruncko, J.
    Gladine, C.
    Lajdova, I.
    Mateasik, A.
    Chorvat, D., Jr.
    Chorvatova, A. Marcek
    MULTIPHOTON MICROSCOPY IN THE BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES XV, 2015, 9329
  • [25] Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging for viscosity and diffusion measurements
    Suhling, Klaus
    Teijeiro-Gonzalez, Yurema
    Steinmark, I. Emilie
    James, Arjuna L.
    Economou, Augoustina M.
    Yahioglu, Gokhan
    Le Marois, Alix
    Hirvonen, Liisa M.
    Nedbal, Jakub
    Levitt, James A.
    Chung, Pei-Hua
    Dreiss, Cecile A.
    Beavil, Andrew J.
    Beavil, Rebecca L.
    Ortiz-Zapater, Elena
    Lorenz, Christian D.
    Parsons, Maddy
    Crnjar, Alessandro
    Cornell, Bethan
    Molteni, Carla
    MULTIPHOTON MICROSCOPY IN THE BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES XIX, 2019, 10882
  • [26] Bayesian analysis of fluorescence lifetime imaging data
    Rowley, Mark I.
    Barber, Paul R.
    Coolen, Anthony C. C.
    Vojnovic, Borivoj
    MULTIPHOTON MICROSCOPY IN THE BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES XI, 2011, 7903
  • [27] Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy in life sciences
    Borst, Jan Willem
    Visser, Antonie J. W. G.
    MEASUREMENT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2010, 21 (10)
  • [28] Spectrally resolved fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy
    Hanley, QS
    Arndt-Jovin, DJ
    Jovin, TM
    APPLIED SPECTROSCOPY, 2002, 56 (02) : 155 - 166
  • [29] Fluorescence lifetime imaging in drug delivery research☆
    Lu, Yiqing
    Jabbari, Parinaz
    Mukhamedshin, Anton
    Zvyagin, Andrei V.
    ADVANCED DRUG DELIVERY REVIEWS, 2025, 218
  • [30] High speed multispectral fluorescence lifetime imaging
    Fereidouni, Farzad
    Reitsma, Keimpe
    Gerritsen, Hans C.
    OPTICS EXPRESS, 2013, 21 (10): : 11769 - 11782