Blue Luminescent Antibody Derived from House Mouse

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== Modern Implications ==
== Modern Implications ==
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The mechanism in which this protein emits light is similar to the mechanism used in modern day LEDs, which eludes to the possibility of a biological LED<ref name="news">Castelvecchi, D. (2013, September 23). True Blue: Electron jumps make protein shine like an LED. Retrieved from https://www.sciencenews.org/article/true-blue-electron-jumps-make-protein-shine-led</ref>. While it is unlikely to find a true LED occurring naturally, the existence of this protein suggests that bioluminescent marine organisms could have utilized systems similar to an LED in order to give off light. The existence of this protein also suggests the possibility of genetically engineering organisms to exhibit this sort of luminesence. The duration of the light 3CFB emits makes it incredibly useful in biosensing. It can be used in methods such as ELISA assays as an antibody. After UV light exposure, if the desired ligand to be bound to 3CFB is present, the wells which contain the desired compound would glow. The duration and brightness of this glow means that it is an incredibly sensitive qualitative test. It can also be used in sensing mercury, the evaluation of catalysts, sensing cysteine residues on viral protein coats, and in other biosensor applications. In the future, there is hope of developing similarly luminescent protein-ligand complexes.
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The mechanism in which this protein emits light is similar to the mechanism used in modern day LEDs, which eludes to the possibility of a biological LED. While it is unlikely to find a true LED occurring naturally, the existence of this protein suggests that bioluminescent marine organisms could have utilized systems similar to an LED in order to give off light. The existence of this protein also suggests the possibility of genetically engineering organisms to exhibit this sort of luminesence. The duration of the light 3CFB emits makes it incredibly useful in biosensing. It can be used in methods such as ELISA assays as an antibody. After UV light exposure, if the desired ligand to be bound to 3CFB is present, the wells which contain the desired compound would glow. The duration and brightness of this glow means that it is an incredibly sensitive qualitative test. It can also be used in sensing mercury, the evaluation of catalysts, sensing cysteine residues on viral protein coats, and in other biosensor applications. In the future, there is hope of developing similarly luminescent protein-ligand complexes.<ref name="news">Castelvecchi, D. (2013, September 23). True Blue: Electron jumps make protein shine like an LED. Retrieved from https://www.sciencenews.org/article/true-blue-electron-jumps-make-protein-shine-led</ref>
== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 15:28, 1 May 2019

3cfb, resolution 1.60Å

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Ashley M. Harness, Michal Harel

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