1965
DOI: 10.1021/ja01083a011
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Energy Transfer. A System with Relatively Fixed Donor-Acceptor Separation

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1969
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Cited by 194 publications
(107 citation statements)
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“…Electronic excitation energy can be efficiently transferred between a fluorescent energy donor (such as fluorescein) and a suitable energy acceptor (such as eosin) over distances of the order of 50 A. This transfer process depends on the inverse sixth power of the distance between the donor and acceptor (11,18,29). Hence, we expected that a donor-labeled actin would transfer energy to an adjacent acceptor-labeled actin but not to a more distant one.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Electronic excitation energy can be efficiently transferred between a fluorescent energy donor (such as fluorescein) and a suitable energy acceptor (such as eosin) over distances of the order of 50 A. This transfer process depends on the inverse sixth power of the distance between the donor and acceptor (11,18,29). Hence, we expected that a donor-labeled actin would transfer energy to an adjacent acceptor-labeled actin but not to a more distant one.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Intermolecular transfer of electronic excitation energy, which depends on the inverse sixth power of the separation between donor and acceptor dyes (1), has been extensively used to examine proximity relationships in well-defined biochemical systems (2)(3)(4)(5) Values for R0, the critical distance for 50% efficient energy transfer between different dye pairs, were calculated from the * To whom reprint requests should be sent. …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Intermolecular transfer of electronic excitation energy, which depends on the inverse sixth power of the separation between donor and acceptor dyes (1), has been extensively used to examine proximity relationships in well-defined biochemical systems (2)(3)(4)(5). Energy transfer between dyes in more complex biological structures can also in principle be used to detect systematic differences between donor and acceptor binding domains.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…13 Forster has proposed that the transfer occurs by a dipole-dipole resonance interaction between the energy donor and acceptor chromophores. In his theory, the rate constant for transfer kT is related to geometric and spectroscopic factors by5 kT = r-JK2 n-4 kF X 8.71 X 1023 sec-1 (1) where r is the distance (in A) between the centers of the donor and acceptor transition moments, K2 is the dipole-dipole orientation factor, n is the refractive index of the medium, and kF is the rate constant (in sec1) for fluorescence emission by the donor. The spectral overlap integral J, which measures the extent to which the donor and acceptor transitions are in resonance, is given by = fF(X)e(X)dX (2) where F (X) is the fluorescence intensity of the energy donor at wavelength X (in cm), and E(X) is the molar decadic extinction coefficient (in cm-' M-) of the energy acceptor.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%