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December 14, 2009 - Volume 87, Number 50
- p. 34
Science & Technology Concentrates
More Science & Technology Concentrates
- A Model Of Aerosol Aging
- Tool will be a boon to efforts to model aerosol effects on climate.
- Good Beer Is All In The Fold
- Partially-folded protein from barley steadies brew's tiny bubbles.
- How Thiols Photoswitch Cyanine Dyes
- Mechanism will aid design of dyes for imaging biological systems with super-resolution fluorescence microscopy.
- Nanotube-Based Sensor Detects Gamma Rays
- Carbon nanotube-polymer composite could find practical use in national security or nuclear research.
- Odd Friction Behavior Of Droplets
- Novel instrument probes components of force in sliding droplets.
- Earth's Gaseous Orgins
- Our planet’s gaseous center came from vapor-laden comets, meteorites, and dust.
- Quasicrystalline Tetrahedra
- Computer simulations predict unexpected packing for non-spherical objects.
- Fixing Function In Cystic Fibrosis
- Targeting cell’s protein-processing machinery helps get a flawed channel working
Topics Covered
Certain super-resolution fluorescence microscopy techniques used for biological imaging rely on photoswitching of cyanine dyes. Understanding the mechanism of this photoswitching, in which red laser light switches a dye from a fluorescent to a dark state and subsequent ultraviolet illumination turns the fluorescence back on, could help scientists design improved photoswitchable probes. Using single-molecule imaging and mass spectrometry, Harvard University chemistry professor Xiaowei Zhuang and coworkers tested the role that primary thiols play in facilitating the reaction (J. Am. Chem. Soc., DOI: 10.1021/ja904588g). They propose that the thiol forms a nonfluorescent adduct with the dye, a switching mechanism originally hypothesized by Roger Y. Tsien of the University of California, San Diego, one of the coauthors. Mass spectrometry confirms that the mass difference between the fluorescent and dark states matches the mass of the thiol (β-mercaptoethanol shown). Fragmentation patterns in the mass spectra are consistent with the addition of the thiol to the dye’s polymethine bridge. Such reactivity helps explain why the cyanine dye Cy3, which has a shorter polymethine bridge than Cy5 or Cy7, is unable to switch to the dark state.
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
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