Fluorescence resonance energy transfer to study receptor dimerization in living cells

Methods in Molecular Biology
Jürgen E Bader, Annette G Beck-Sickinger

Abstract

The versatility, sensitivity, and feasibility of fluorescence methods are very attractive to study protein-protein interaction at low levels of protein expression. However, one of the most severe limits in protein chemistry has been the difficulty of introducing site-specific fluorescent labels. The development of genetically encoded fluorescent probes, that is, green fluorescent protein (GFP) and its variants therefore opened up a broad field of novel applications. To characterize protein-protein interactions and determine detailed spatio-temporal dynamics of partners that are molecularly well characterized, fluorescence energy transfer methods are excellent nondestructive tools in living cells. Cellular responses to external factors are extensively based on direct molecular interaction and especially G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) have been shown to interact with an unexpected level of complexity. Classical models of signal transduction describe GPCRs as monomeric proteins, while recent studies using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and other methods show that GPCRs can also function as homo- or heterodimers. Theoretical background information on FRET technology and its diverse applications are summarized he...Continue Reading

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