Langbeschreibung
Fluorescent proteins are intimately connected to research in the life sciences. Tagging of gene products with fluorescent proteins has revolutionized all areas of biosciences, ranging from fundamental biochemistry to clinical oncology, to environmental research. The discovery of the Green Fluorescent Protein, its first, seminal application and the ingenious development of a broad palette of fluorescence proteins of other colours, was consequently recognised with the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2008.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
One-Photon and Two-Photon Excitation of Fluorescent Proteins.- Primary Photophysical Processes in Chromoproteins.- Fluorescence Lifetime of Fluorescent Proteins.- Synthetic Biology of Autofluorescent Proteins.- Vibrational spectroscopy: a tool to investigate the structure of the chromophore and its environmen.- Proton Travel in Green Fluorescent Protein.- Photoconversion of the Green Fluorescent Protein and Related Proteins.- Spectral Versatility of Fluorescent Proteins Observed on the Single Molecule Level.- Structure-Function Relationships in Fluorescent Marker Proteins of the Green Fluorescent Protein Family.