Abstract

The unique optical properties of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) are highly advantageous for biological imaging and analysis, particularly when combined with Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET). A recent innovation in this area has been concentric FRET (cFRET), wherein QDs are assembled with multiple copies of two different types of fluorescent label. Although multifunctional biological probes have been developed utilizing cFRET, a detailed photophysical analysis of cFRET has not been undertaken, and energy transfer in these probes has been understood only qualitatively. Here, we characterize a prototypical QD-(A555)M-(A647)N cFRET configuration through photoluminescence (PL) intensity, decay, and photobleaching measurements. This cFRET configuration combines a central, green-emitting QD with Alexa Fluor 555 (A555) and Alexa Fluor 647 (A647) dyes that are assembled to QDs through peptide linkers, where M and N are the numbers of A555 and A647 per QD. Following initial photoexcitation of the QD, the ...

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