Publications by authors named "Haley J Carlson"

Red fluorescent indicators for calcium ion (Ca(2+)) are preferable, relative to blue-shifted alternatives, for biological imaging applications due to the lower phototoxicity, lower autofluorescent background and deeper tissue penetration associated with longer wavelength light. Accordingly, we undertook the development of a genetically encoded Ca(2+) indicator based on the popular and widely utilized Discosoma-derived red fluorescent protein, mCherry. Starting from a promising but dimly fluorescent circular permutated variant of mCherry, we first engineered a 13-fold brighter variant (cp196V1.

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As part of an ongoing effort to develop genetically encoded calcium ion (Ca2+) indicators we recently described a new variant, designated CH-GECO2.1, that is a genetic chimera of the red fluorescent protein (FP) mCherry, calmodulin (CaM), and a peptide that binds to Ca2+-bound CaM. In contrast to the closely related Ca2+ indicator R-GECO1, CH-GECO2.

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Circularly permuted fluorescent proteins (FPs) have a growing number of uses in live cell fluorescence biosensing applications. Most notably, they enable the construction of single fluorescent protein-based biosensors for Ca(2+) and other analytes of interest. Circularly permuted FPs are also of great utility in the optimization of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based biosensors by providing a means for varying the critical dipole-dipole orientation.

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The phenomenon of Förster (or fluorescence) resonance energy transfer (FRET) between two fluorescent proteins of different hues provides a robust foundation for the design and construction of biosensors for the detection of intracellular events. Accordingly, FRET-based biosensors for a variety of biologically relevant ions, molecules, and specific enzymatic activities, have now been developed and used to investigate numerous questions in cell biology. An emerging trend in the use of FRET-based biosensors is to apply them in combination with a second biosensor in order to achieve simultaneous imaging of multiple biochemical parameters in a single living cell.

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By virtue of its self-sufficiency to form a visible wavelength chromophore within the confines of its tertiary structure, the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein (GFP) is single-handedly responsible for the ever-growing popularity of fluorescence imaging of recombinant fusion proteins in biological research. Engineered variants of GFP with altered excitation or emission wavelength maxima have helped to expand the range of applications of GFP. The engineering of the GFP variants is usually done empirically by genetic modifications of the chromophore structure and/or its environment in order to find variants with new photophysical properties.

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