Close Menu
Earth & BeyondEarth & Beyond

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Book Review | Boxing: The 100 Greatest Fighters

    Vader and Nina win Milk Cup 2025

    Alexander Skarsgård Does Kinky in the Front, Kinkier in the Back

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Earth & BeyondEarth & Beyond
    YouTube
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Sports
    • Technology
    • Trending & Viral News
    Earth & BeyondEarth & Beyond
    Subscribe
    You are at:Home»Technology»Time-resolved fluorescent proteins expand the microscopy palette
    Technology

    Time-resolved fluorescent proteins expand the microscopy palette

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondOctober 17, 2025004 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Time-resolved fluorescent proteins expand the microscopy palette
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Confocal light micrograph of cultured endothelial cells, with fluorescent dyes added to show cell structures.

    Fluorescent dyes can help researchers to visualize the structure of a cell — but it can be difficult to use more than a handful.Credit: David Becker/SPL

    When working with fluorescent dyes or proteins, researchers typically focus on two variables: the wavelength of light at which the molecules are stimulated to fluoresce, and the wavelengths at which they emit light — that is, their colour. By balancing those properties, researchers can distinguish between half a dozen or so fluorescently tagged molecules in the same sample.

    But there’s more to fluorescence than colour, and scientists can now more easily use another property of fluorescent molecules to increase the number of proteins that can be visualized at the same time.

    Led by Xin Zhang, a chemist at Westlake University in Hangzhou, China, the team designed more than two dozen fluorescent proteins that differ not only by colour, but also in how much time they spend in their excited state — a property called the fluorescence lifetime. The researchers call these molecules time-resolved fluorescent proteins, or tr-FPs. Their findings were published online last month in Cell1.

    “It’s brilliant work,” says Conor Evans, a physical chemist at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston. The team has given researchers a “dial-able palette” from which they can pick both a colour and a lifetime to get what they need, he says. “That’s very powerful.”

    Expanding the palette

    Suppose that a scientist wants to map a cellular process associated with a specific protein. To work out where in the cell that process occurs, the researcher can use fluorescent dyes to highlight cellular landmarks — blue for the nucleus, red for the cytoskeleton and green for the mitochondria, for instance. Viewing other proteins of interest against this background would require still more colours. However, because the visible spectrum is relatively narrow and fluorescent molecules emit light over a range of wavelengths, standard microscopes can handle only a handful of colours simultaneously. After that, the emission spectra start to bleed together, making it difficult to discern which signals are coming from which molecule.

    The fluorescence lifetime provides a way to expand that palette.

    When a fluorescent molecule absorbs light, its electronic energy levels increase to enter what is called the excited state. The molecule hovers in this excited state for pico- to nanoseconds, and then begins its luminous descent to the ground state, emitting excess energy in the form of photons. The time a molecule spends in an excited state — that is, between absorbing and emitting photons — is called the lifetime.

    To change the lifetimes of existing fluorescent proteins, Zhang’s team mutated some of the amino-acid residues to destabilize the region in which the fluorescent signal is generated. The researchers then screened the resulting proteins to identify variants with different lifetimes, but identical emission spectra, to those of their wild-type counterparts. In all, they produced 28 variants, spanning most of the visible spectrum.

    Zhang’s group then put this palette to work, fusing the tr-FPs to various target proteins and testing their behaviour in various subcellular locations. They also examined how the tr-FPs performed in a wide range of applications, including super-resolution microscopy, and showed that the technology enables live-cell imaging of nine target proteins using only three colour channels.

    Zhang notes that lifetime-based imaging is not a new concept, but he hopes the tr-FPs will help more researchers to take advantage of the technique. “I think this is more like an addition to the broad and powerful family of fluorescent proteins,” he says, rather than some kind of paradigm shift.

    The researchers did, however, test the tr-FPs in what they say is a new application: quantifying the relative concentrations of two proteins in a single living cell, something that is difficult to determine from fluorescence intensity alone.

    Expand fluorescent microscopy palette proteins Timeresolved
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleTrump will call time on the Ukraine war now, and Russia knows it
    Next Article Police commissioner calls for review of Maccabi Tel Aviv fans’ ban from UK match after PM’s criticism – politics live | Politics
    Earth & Beyond
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Wikipedia says traffic is falling due to AI search summaries and social video

    October 19, 2025

    Warning signs

    October 19, 2025

    The 18 Best Golf Gifts for Every Kind of Golfer (2025)

    October 18, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest Post

    If you do 5 things, you’re more indecisive than most—what to do instead

    UK ministers launch investigation into blaze that shut Heathrow

    The SEC Resets Its Crypto Relationship

    How MLB plans to grow Ohtani, Dodger fandom in Japan into billions for league

    Stay In Touch
    • YouTube
    Latest Reviews

    Wikipedia says traffic is falling due to AI search summaries and social video

    By Earth & BeyondOctober 19, 2025

    Warning signs

    By Earth & BeyondOctober 19, 2025

    The 18 Best Golf Gifts for Every Kind of Golfer (2025)

    By Earth & BeyondOctober 18, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Bitcoin in the bush – crypto mining brings power to rural areas

    March 25, 202513 Views

    Israeli Police Question Palestinian Director Hamdan Ballal After West Bank Incident

    March 25, 20258 Views

    How to print D&D’s new gold dragon at home

    March 25, 20257 Views
    Our Picks

    Book Review | Boxing: The 100 Greatest Fighters

    Vader and Nina win Milk Cup 2025

    Alexander Skarsgård Does Kinky in the Front, Kinkier in the Back

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2025 Earth & Beyond.
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Newsletter Signup

    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter below and never miss the latest product or an exclusive offer.

    Enter your email address

    Thanks, I’m not interested