Despite showing comparable biophysical brightness to
eGFP when purified protein was normalized, this was not seen in living cells. This suggested there was not enough chromophore (biliverdin) within cells. Addition of biliverdin increased fluorescence, but smURFP with
biliverdin was not comparable to eGFP. Biliverdin has two
carboxylates at neutral
pH and this is inhibiting cellular entry. Biliverdin dimethyl ester is a more
hydrophobic analog and readily crosses the cellular
membrane. smURFP with biliverdin dimethyl ester shows comparable fluorescence to
eGFP in
cells and is brighter than
bacterial
phytochrome fluorescent proteins. The free
chromophore can be differentiated from chromophore attached to smURFP by fluorescence lifetime imaging (
FLIM) in living cells. Free biliverdin dimethyl ester (BVMe2) has a fluorescence lifetime of 0.586 ns, while BVMe2 attached to smURFP has a fluorescence lifetime of 1.27
ns. . In mice, smURFP fluorescence is visible in
HT1080 tumor
xenografts without exogenous biliverdin, but fluorescence is less than coral-derived red fluorescent proteins,
mCherry Visible fluorescence is not always usable fluorescence and fluorescent proteins should always be compared to other useful, genetically encoded fluorescent proteins.
Intravenous injection of exogenous
biliverdin or biliverdin dimethyl ester does not increase fluorescence of smURFP expressed in
tumors after 1 to 24 hours.
Mass spectrometry showed that the
ester groups were rapidly removed from biliverdin dimethyl ester. Addition of 25 μM
biliverdin or biliverdin dimethyl ester dramatically increased fluorescence of
excised tumors and smURFP is present without chromophore. Further research is necessary to optimize
chromophore availability in mice to obtain fluorescence comparable or greater than
coral-derived red fluorescent proteins. == Adding chromophore to cells ==