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1 February 2000 End-to-End Diffusion on the Microsecond Timescale Measured with Resonance Energy Transfer from a Long-lifetime Rhenium Metal–Ligand Complex
Joseph R. Lakowicz, Rajesh Nair, Grzegorz Piszczek, Ignacy Gryczynski
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Abstract

We measured the end-to-end diffusion coefficient of an alkyl chain-linked donor–acceptor pair using the time-resolved frequency-domain decay of the donor. The donor was a rhenium metal–ligand complex with a mean decay time ranging from 2.1 to 7.9 μs in the absence of the Texas red acceptor. The decay time was used to measure the donor-to-acceptor distance distribution and the mutual diffusion coefficient. Using this long lifetime donor, it was easily possible to determine a diffusion coefficient near 2 × 10−8 cm2/s and diffusion coefficients as low as 1.3 × 10−9 cm2/s were measurable. Such long lifetime donors should be valuable for measuring the flexing of peptides on the microsecond timescale, domain motions of proteins and lateral diffusion in membranes. The availability of microsecond decay time luminophores now allows luminescence spectroscopy to be useful generally for studies of microsecond dynamics of biological macromolecules.

Joseph R. Lakowicz, Rajesh Nair, Grzegorz Piszczek, and Ignacy Gryczynski "End-to-End Diffusion on the Microsecond Timescale Measured with Resonance Energy Transfer from a Long-lifetime Rhenium Metal–Ligand Complex," Photochemistry and Photobiology 71(2), 157-161, (1 February 2000). https://doi.org/10.1562/0031-8655(2000)071<0157:ETEDOT>2.0.CO;2
Received: 25 June 1999; Accepted: 1 November 1999; Published: 1 February 2000
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