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Scientists discover why a fluorescent protein photobleaches reversibly

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David L. Shenkenberg

Researcher S. James Remington and colleagues at the University of Oregon in Eugene and at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, have discovered why a fluorescent protein can recover its fluorescence after photobleaching, a process also known as photoswitching. Remington said that the mechanism likely applies to all photoswitchable proteins, including GFP. Recent advances in fluorescence microscopy use photoswitchable fluorescent proteins to enable visualization of biological structures that are 1/20 the size of what the wavelength of light would theoretically allow, he said. For...Read full article

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    Published: June 2007
    Glossary
    fluorescent protein
    Fluorescent proteins are proteins that exhibit the property of fluorescence, which is the ability to absorb light at a specific wavelength and emit light at a longer wavelength. These proteins are widely used as molecular tags or markers in molecular and cellular biology to visualize and study the location, movement, and interactions of specific proteins within living cells or organisms. Key features and points about fluorescent proteins include: Fluorescence emission: Fluorescent proteins...
    Basic SciencebiologicalBiophotonicsfluorescent proteinMicroscopyNews & Featuresphotoswitching

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