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Topic: Causes of reversible photobleaching for fluorophores?  (Read 4309 times)

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Offline poobear

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Causes of reversible photobleaching for fluorophores?
« on: April 09, 2011, 05:25:55 AM »
Hi!

We did an experiment where we followed a tryptophan residue in a protein with fluorescence (excision 280 nm, emission scan 300-440 nm). There was a drop in fluorescence, but if we paused the light source for a moment the fluorescence went back to normal.

I can understand irreversible photobleaching, too much energy from the light can simply destroy bonds in the fluorophore. But what causes are there for reversible photobleaching?  ???
I tried a pubmed search but didn't find anything good..

Thanks!

Offline Yggdrasil

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Re: Causes of reversible photobleaching for fluorophores?
« Reply #1 on: April 12, 2011, 01:21:43 PM »
Here's a nice paper which explores the mechanism by which a carbocyanine dye can reversibly transition between a fluorescent state and a non-fluorescent dark state.  I'm not sure how relevant it is to tryptophan fluorescence, but maybe it can give you some ideas:

Dempsey et al. 2009 Photoswitching Mechanism of Cyanine Dyes.  J. Am. Chem. Soc. 131: 18192–18193.  doi:10.1021/ja904588g

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