Abstract

Green fluorescent protein (GFP) and its variants are an essential tool for visualizing functional units in biomaterials. This is achieved by the fascinating optical properties of them. Here, we report novel optical properties of enhanced GFP (EGFP), which is one of widely used engineered variants of the wild-type GFP. We study the electron-beam-induced luminescence, which is known as cathodoluminescence (CL), using the hybrid light and transmission electron microscope. Surprisingly, even from the same specimen, we observe a completely different dependences of the fluorescence and CL on the electron beam irradiation. Since light emission is normally independent of whether an electron is excited to the upper level by light or by electron beam, this difference is quite peculiar. We conclude that the electron beam irradiation causes the local generation of a new redshifted form of EGFP and CL is preferentially emitted from it. In addition, we also find that the redshifted form is rather robust to electron bombardment. These remarkable properties can be utilized for three-dimensional reconstruction without electron staining in focused ion beam/scanning electron microscopy technology and provide significant potential for simultaneously observing the functional information specified by super-resolution CL imaging and the structural information at the molecular level obtained by electron microscope.

Highlights

  • Green fluorescent protein (GFP) and its variants are an essential tool for visualizing functional units in biomaterials

  • While the PL spectrum before electron irradiation attains a normal enhanced GFP (EGFP) spectrum, the CL spectra are clearly different from those of PL and the peak appears at 2.1 eV (Fig. 1b)

  • The electron irradiation seems to destroy some components of EGFP and change the spectra, the PL spectra after electron beam exposure differs from the CL spectra, where we acquired the PL and CL spectra alternately

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Summary

Introduction

Green fluorescent protein (GFP) and its variants are an essential tool for visualizing functional units in biomaterials. We suggest that a novel form of EGFP, which emits a redshifted fluorescence, is generated by the electron beam irradiation. In previous ­investigations[13,15,16], the excited state of EGFP in the oxidant environment induces the generation of the redshifted form of the chromophore, and we believe that a kind of similar scenario occurs due to the electron beam irradiation.

Results
Conclusion

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