posted on 2016-05-17, 00:00authored byEitan Lerner, Evelyn Ploetz, Johannes Hohlbein, Thorben Cordes, Shimon Weiss
Single-molecule,
protein-induced fluorescence enhancement (PIFE)
serves as a molecular ruler at molecular distances inaccessible to
other spectroscopic rulers such as Förster-type resonance energy
transfer (FRET) or photoinduced electron transfer. In order to provide
two simultaneous measurements of two distances on different molecular
length scales for the analysis of macromolecular complexes, we and
others recently combined measurements of PIFE and FRET (PIFE-FRET)
on the single molecule level. PIFE relies on steric hindrance of the
fluorophore Cy3, which is covalently attached to a biomolecule of
interest, to rotate out of an excited-state trans isomer to the cis isomer through a 90° intermediate.
In this work, we provide a theoretical framework that accounts for
relevant photophysical and kinetic parameters of PIFE-FRET, show how
this framework allows the extraction of the fold-decrease in isomerization
mobility from experimental data, and show how these results provide
information on changes in the accessible volume of Cy3. The utility
of this model is then demonstrated for experimental results on PIFE-FRET
measurement of different protein–DNA interactions. The proposed
model and extracted parameters could serve as a benchmark to allow
quantitative comparison of PIFE effects in different biological systems.