| Literature DB >> 33408990 |
Rosana S Molina1,2, Jonathan King3, Jacob Franklin3, Nathan Clack3, Christopher McRaven4,5, Vasily Goncharov4, Daniel Flickinger4, Karel Svoboda4, Mikhail Drobizhev1,6, Thomas E Hughes1.
Abstract
Two-photon microscopy together with fluorescent proteins and fluorescent protein-based biosensors are commonly used tools in neuroscience. To enhance their experimental scope, it is important to optimize fluorescent proteins for two-photon excitation. Directed evolution of fluorescent proteins under one-photon excitation is common, but many one-photon properties do not correlate with two-photon properties. A simple system for expressing fluorescent protein mutants is E. coli colonies on an agar plate. The small focal volume of two-photon excitation makes creating a high throughput screen in this system a challenge for a conventional point-scanning approach. We present an instrument and accompanying software that solves this challenge by selectively scanning each colony based on a colony map captured under one-photon excitation. This instrument, called the GIZMO, can measure the two-photon excited fluorescence of 10,000 E. coli colonies in 7 hours. We show that the GIZMO can be used to evolve a fluorescent protein under two-photon excitation.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33408990 PMCID: PMC7747914 DOI: 10.1364/BOE.409353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Opt Express ISSN: 2156-7085 Impact factor: 3.732