4.8 Article

Investigating Single-Molecule Fluorescence Spectral Heterogeneity of Rhodamines Using High-Throughput Single-Molecule Spectroscopy

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS
Volume 12, Issue 16, Pages 3914-3921

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.1c00192

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [CBET-1706642, EFMA-1830969, CHE-1954430]
  2. NIH [R01GM140478, R01EY019949, R01GM139151]
  3. DOE [DE-SC0004752]

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The study investigated the causes of single-molecule fluorescence spectral heterogeneities and found that they were influenced by structural rigidity and environmental changes. Factors such as system noise uncertainty and environmental polarity were ruled out. The rotational flexibility of N,N-dialkylated groups was found to contribute to the heterogeneities.
We experimentally investigated several intramolecular coordinate and environmental changes as potential causes of single-molecule fluorescence spectral heterogeneities (smFSH). We developed a high-throughput single-molecule spectroscopy method to analyze more than 5000 single-molecule emission spectra from each of 9 commonly used fluorophores with different structural rigidities and deposited on substrates with different polarities. We observed an unexpectedly high smFSH from structurally rigid Rhodamine B compared with a structurally flexible Cyanine dye.Alexa Fluor 647. Based on experimentally measured smFSH, we ruled out the system's noise uncertainty, single-molecule spectral diffusion, and environmental polarity as the primary causes of the high smFSH. We found that the rotational flexibility of N,N-dialkylated groups contributed to the smFSH. With the high smFSH observed in structurally more rigid model fluorophores, we speculated that other intramolecular coordinate and environmental changes might also contribute to the high smFSH in Rhodamines.

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