1 research outputs found
Single-molecule fluorescence multiplexing by multi-parameter spectroscopic detection of nanostructured FRET labels
Multiplexed, real-time fluorescence detection at the single-molecule level is
highly desirable to reveal the stoichiometry, dynamics, and interactions of
individual molecular species within complex systems. However, traditionally
fluorescence sensing is limited to 3-4 concurrently detected labels, due to low
signal-to-noise, high spectral overlap between labels, and the need to avoid
dissimilar dye chemistries. We have engineered a palette of several dozen
fluorescent labels, called FRETfluors, for spectroscopic multiplexing at the
single-molecule level. Each FRETfluor is a compact nanostructure formed from
the same three chemical building blocks (DNA, Cy3, and Cy5). The composition
and dye-dye geometries create a characteristic F\"orster Resonance Energy
Transfer (FRET) efficiency for each construct. In addition, we varied the local
DNA sequence and attachment chemistry to alter the Cy3 and Cy5 emission
properties and thereby shift the emission signatures of an entire series of
FRET constructs to new sectors of the multi-parameter detection space. Unique
spectroscopic emission of each FRETfluor is therefore conferred by a
combination of FRET and this site-specific tuning of individual fluorophore
photophysics. We show single-molecule identification of a set of 27 FRETfluors
in a sample mixture using a subset of constructs statistically selected to
minimize classification errors, measured using an Anti-Brownian ELectrokinetic
(ABEL) trap which provides precise multi-parameter spectroscopic measurements.
The ABEL trap also enables discrimination between FRETfluors attached to a
target (here: mRNA) and unbound FRETfluors, eliminating the need for washes or
removal of excess label by purification. We show single-molecule identification
of a set of 27 FRETfluors in a sample mixture using a subset of constructs
selected to minimize classification errors.Comment: 43 pages, 6 figures, 13 Supplementary figures, 3 Supplementary
tables, 5 Supplementary note