Extrinsic Fluorescent Dyes as Tools for Protein Characterization
Centre for Human Drug Research · Leiden University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Noncovalent, extrinsic fluorescent dyes are applied in various fields of protein analysis, e.g. to characterize folding intermediates, measure surface hydrophobicity, and detect aggregation or fibrillation. The main underlying mechanisms, which explain the fluorescence properties of many extrinsic dyes, are solvent relaxation processes and (twisted) intramolecular charge transfer reactions, which are affected by the environment and by interactions of the dyes with proteins. In recent time, the use of extrinsic fluorescent dyes such as ANS, Bis-ANS, Nile Red, Thioflavin T and others has increased, because of their versatility, sensitivity and suitability for high-throughput screening. The intention of this…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 153
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Thioflavin
- Fluorescence
- Intramolecular force
- Chemistry
- Nile red
- Protein folding
- Förster resonance energy transfer
- Characterization (materials science)