Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching
Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) denotes an optical technique capable of quantifying the two dimensional lateral diffusion of a molecularly thin film containing fluorescently labeled probes. This technique provides great utility in biological studies of cell membrane diffusion and protein binding. In addition, surface deposition of a fluorescing phospholipid bilayer (or monolayer) allows the characterization of hydrophilic (or hydrophobic) surfaces in terms of surface structure and free energy. Similar, though less well known, techniques have been developed to investigate the 3-dimensional diffusion and binding of molecules inside the cell; they are also referred to as FRAP.
Experimental Setup
The basic apparatus comprises an optical microscope, a light source and some fluorescent probe. Fluorescent emission is contingent upon adsorption of a specific optical wavelength or color which
restricts the choice of lamps. Most commonly, a broad spectrum mercury or xenon source is used in conjunction with a color filter. The
technique begins by saving a background image of the sample before photobleaching. Next, the light source is focused onto a small
patch of the viewable area either by switching to a higher magnification microscope objective or with
- D = w2 / 4t1/2
where w is the width of the beam and t1/2 is the time required for the bleach spot to recover half of its initial intensity.
Applications
Supported Lipid Bilayers
Originally, the FRAP technique was intended for use as a means to characterize the mobility of individual lipid molecules within
a cell membrane. While providing great utility in this role, current research leans more toward investigation of artificial lipid
membranes. Supported by hydrophilic or hydrophobic substrates (to produce lipid bilayers or monolayers respectively) and
incorporating membrane proteins, these biomimetic structures are potentially useful as
analytical devices for determining the identity of unknown substances, understanding cellular transduction, and identifying
ligand binding sites.
Protein Binding
This technique is commonly used in conjunction with green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion proteins, where the studied protein is fused to a GFP. When excited by a specific wavelength of light, the protein will fluoresce. When the protein that is being studied is produced with the GFP, then the fluorescence can be tracked. Photodestroying the GFP, and then watching the repopulation into the bleached area can reveal information about protein interaction partners, organelle continuity and protein trafficking.
If after some time the fluorescence doesn't reach the initial level anymore, then some part of the fluorescence is caused by an immobile fraction (that cannot be replenished by diffusion). Similarly, if the fluorescent proteins bind to static cell receptors, the rate of recovery will be retarded by a factor related to the association and disassociation coefficients of binding. This observation has most recently been exploited to investigate protein binding.
Applications Outside the Membrane
FRAP can also be used to monitor proteins outside the membrane. After the protein of interest is made fluorescent, generally by expression as a GFP fusion protein, a confocal microscope is used to photobleach and monitor a region of the cytoplasm, mitotic spindle, nucleus, or another cellular structure. The mean fluorescence in the region can then be plotted versus time since the photobleaching, and the resulting curve can yield kinetic coefficients for the protein's binding reactions and/or the protein's diffusion coefficient in the medium where it is being monitored. The analysis is most simple when the curve is dominated by only the diffusional or only the binding components. For a circular bleach spot and diffusion-dominated recovery, the fluorescence is described by the Soumpasis equation and involves modified Bessel functions:
- f(t)=e-h(I0(h)+I1(h))
where h=r2/(2*Df*t); r=radius of bleach spot; t=time;Df=diffusion coefficient;f(t) is the normalized fluorescence (goes to 1 as t goes to infinity)
For a binding-dominated reaction, in which the diffusion is much faster than the unbinding of the bleached protein and subsequent binding of unbleached protein, it is given by
- f(t)=1-Beqe-kofft
where Beq is the fraction of the protein that is bound to other structures in the photobleached region at equilibrium, and koff is the dissociation constant for the binding. Sometimes there are multiple binding states in which case there are just more exponential terms of the same form. Many FRAP recoveries are not dominated overwhelmingly by just diffusion or just binding, so their curves are more complex; FRAP recoveries are analyzed in much more detail in Sprague and Pego et al (see References below).
See also
References
- Sprague, B., R. Pego, et al. Analysis of Binding Reactions by Fluorescence Recovery after Photobleaching. Biophys. J. 2004 Jun;86(6):3473-3495.
- Davidson College FRAP site
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