AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to millions of articles from top publications available through your library.

Green Light, Red Light.(fluorescent proteins)(Brief Article)

The Scientist

| July 23, 2001 | Maher, Brendan A. | Copyright The Scientist, Inc. Feb 2009. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

CLONTECH's Fluorescent Timer enables temporal gene expression studies

Screening random mutations of the red fluorescent protein drFP583 from tropical coral, researchers at the National Institutes of Health, Stanford University School of Medicine, the Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry at the Russian Academy of Science, and Palo Alto, Calif.-based BD Biosciences-CLONTECH made an unusual discovery.[1] After fluorescing green for about three hours, a mutant protein called E5 matures and begins to fluoresce red; thus, E5 acts like a stopwatch, telling researchers when the gene is turned on as well as if and when it's turned off.

The authors tested the novel …

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
©2013 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions

The AccessMyLibrary advertising network includes: womensforum.com GlamFamily