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DOI: 10.1038/nbt.1952
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

A reversibly photoswitchable GFP-like protein with fluorescence excitation decoupled from switching

T. Brakemann,André C. Stiel,Gert Weber,Martin A. Andresen,Ilaria Testa,Tim Grotjohann,Marcel Leutenegger,Uwe Plessmann,Henning Urlaub,Christian Eggeling,Markus C. Wahl,Stefan W. Hell,Stefan Jakobs

Fluorescence
Green fluorescent protein
Chromophore
2011
Brakemann et al. present a reversibly photoswitchable fluorescent protein, called Dreiklang, that can be turned on and off at wavelengths distinct from those used for imaging. They show that the protein is advantageous for studying protein dynamics in living cells and for super-resolution imaging. Photoswitchable fluorescent proteins have enabled new approaches for imaging cells, but their utility has been limited either because they cannot be switched repeatedly or because the wavelengths for switching and fluorescence imaging are strictly coupled. We report a bright, monomeric, reversibly photoswitchable variant of GFP, Dreiklang, whose fluorescence excitation spectrum is decoupled from that for optical switching. Reversible on-and-off switching in living cells is accomplished at illumination wavelengths of ∼365 nm and ∼405 nm, respectively, whereas fluorescence is elicited at ∼515 nm. Mass spectrometry and high-resolution crystallographic analysis of the same protein crystal in the photoswitched on- and off-states demonstrate that switching is based on a reversible hydration/dehydration reaction that modifies the chromophore. The switching properties of Dreiklang enable far-field fluorescence nanoscopy in living mammalian cells using both a coordinate-targeted and a stochastic single molecule switching approach.
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    A reversibly photoswitchable GFP-like protein with fluorescence excitation decoupled from switching” is a paper by T. Brakemann André C. Stiel Gert Weber Martin A. Andresen Ilaria Testa Tim Grotjohann Marcel Leutenegger Uwe Plessmann Henning Urlaub Christian Eggeling Markus C. Wahl Stefan W. Hell Stefan Jakobs published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.