Bimolecular Fluorescence Complementation (BiFC) Analysis as a Probe of Protein Interactions in Living Cells
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor · Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Abstract
Protein interactions are a fundamental mechanism for the generation of biological regulatory specificity. The study of protein interactions in living cells is of particular significance because the interactions that occur in a particular cell depend on the full complement of proteins present in the cell and the external stimuli that influence the cell. Bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) analysis enables direct visualization of protein interactions in living cells. The BiFC assay is based on the association between two nonfluorescent fragments of a fluorescent protein when they are brought in proximity to each other by an interaction between proteins fused to the fragments. Numerous protein…
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Bimolecular fluorescence complementation
- Fluorescence microscope
- Protein–protein interaction
- Fluorescence
- Cell biology
- Biophysics
- Complementation
- Cell