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Dive into the research topics where Richard N. Day is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard N. Day.


Journal of Microscopy | 2007

Characterization of spectral FRET imaging microscopy for monitoring nuclear protein interactions

Ye Chen; Joshua P. Mauldin; Richard N. Day; Ammasi Periasamy

The spectral processed Förster resonance energy transfer (psFRET) imaging method provides an effective and fast method for measuring protein–protein interactions in living specimens. The commercially available linear unmixing algorithms efficiently remove the contribution of donor spectral bleedthrough to the FRET signal. However, the acceptor contribution to spectral bleedthrough in the FRET image cannot be similarly removed, since the acceptor spectrum is identical to the FRET spectrum. Here, we describe the development of a computer algorithm that measures and removes the contaminating ASBT signal in the sFRET image. The new method is characterized in living cells that expressed FRET standards in which the donor and acceptor fluorescent proteins are tethered by amino acid linkers of specific lengths. The method is then used to detect the homo‐dimerization of a transcription factor in the nucleus of living cells, and then to measure the interactions of that protein with a second transcription factor.


BioTechniques | 2005

Quantitative imaging of protein interactions in the cell nucleus.

Ty C. Voss; Ignacio A. Demarco; Richard N. Day

Over the past decade, genetically encoded fluorescent proteins have become widely used as noninvasive markers in living cells. The development of fluorescent proteins, coupled with advances in digital imaging, has led to the rapid evolution of live-cell imaging methods. These approaches are being applied to address biological questions of the recruitment, co-localization, and interactions of specific proteins within particular subcellular compartments. In the wake of this rapid progress, however, come important issues associated with the acquisition and analysis of ever larger and more complex digital imaging data sets. Using protein localization in the mammalian cell nucleus as an example, we will review some recent developments in the application of quantitative imaging to analyze subcellular distribution and co-localization of proteins in populations of living cells. In this report, we review the principles of acquiring fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) microscopy measurements to define the spatial relationships between proteins. We then discuss how fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) provides a method that is independent of intensity-based measurements to detect localized protein interactions with spatial resolution. Finally, we consider potential problems associated with the expression of proteins fused to fluorescent proteins for FRET-based measurements from living cells.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2008

Fluorescent protein tools for studying protein dynamics in living cells: a review

Richard N. Day; Fred Schaufele

We have witnessed remarkable advances over the past decade in the application of optical techniques to visualize the genetically encoded fluorescent proteins (FPs) in living systems. The imaging of the FPs inside living cells has become an essential tool for studies of cell biology and physiology. FPs are now available that span the visible spectrum from deep blue to deep red, providing a wide choice of genetically encoded fluorescent markers. Furthermore, some FPs have been identified that have unusual characteristics that make them useful reporters of the dynamic behaviors of proteins inside cells. These additions to the FP toolbox are now being used for some very innovative live-cell imaging applications. Here, we will highlight the characteristics and uses of a few of these exceptional probes. Many different optical methods can be combined with the FPs from marine organisms to provide quantitative measurements in living systems.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2008

Characterization of an improved donor fluorescent protein for Förster resonance energy transfer microscopy

Richard N. Day; Cynthia F. Booker; Ammasi Periasamy

The genetically encoded fluorescent proteins (FP), used in combination with Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) microscopy, provide the tools necessary for the direct visualization of protein interactions inside living cells. Typically, the Cerulean and Venus variants of the cyan and yellow FPs are used for FRET studies, but there are limitations to their use. Here, Cerulean and the newly developed monomeric Teal FP (mTFP) are compared as FRET donors for Venus using spectral and fluorescence lifetime measurements from living cells. The results demonstrate that when compared to Cerulean, mTFP has increased brightness, optimal excitation using the standard 458-nm laser line, increased photostability, and improved spectral overlap with Venus. In addition, the two-photon excitation and fluorescence lifetime characteristics are determined for mTFP. Together, these measurements indicate that mTFP is an excellent donor fluorophore for FRET studies, and that its use may improve the detection of interactions involving proteins that are difficult to express, or that need to be produced at low levels in cells.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2005

Imaging protein behavior inside the living cell

Richard N. Day

The genetically encoded fluorescent proteins (FPs) have transformed studies in cell biology by allowing the behavior of proteins to be tracked within the natural environment of the living cell. Progressively more complex imaging methods are being used to measure the mobility, co-localization and interactions of proteins labeled with the FPs. This review provides an overview of recent developments in live-cell imaging techniques to analyze the subcellular distribution and interactions of proteins in living cells.


Biomedical optics | 2004

FLIM-FRET microscopy to visualize transcription factor interactions in the nucleus of the living cell

Richard N. Day; Ignacio A. Demarco; Ty C. Voss; Ye Chen; Ammasi Periasamy

Wide-field fluorescence microscopy was used to monitor the co-localization of the homeodomain (HD) transcription factor Pit-1 and the basic-leucine zipper protein CCAAT/enhancer binding protein alpha (C/EBPa), each labeled with fluorescent proteins (FP) in the living cell nucleus. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) microscopy was used to resolve the angstrom-scale spatial relationships of these expressed proteins, and the effect of a Pit-1 point mutation on the interaction with C/EBPa was characterized. Two-photon excitation fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (2p-FLIM) was then used as an independent method to detect these protein interactions. The excited-state lifetime for the cyan FP (CFP) labeling C/EBPa was determined, and the measurements were repeated in cells co-expressing yellow FP (YFP) labeled-proteins. The CFP lifetime was decreased in the presence of the YFP acceptor, which is consistent with donor quenching by FRET. This was verified by acceptor photobleaching, which caused a shift in the donor lifetime to that similar to the donor alone. However, a significant limitation of this technique was demonstrated by the observation that high-energy 2p-excitation resulted in CFP photobleaching and a parallel decrease in its excited-state lifetime. The key question is whether the sensitivity of this imaging approach will be sufficient to acquire significant data from living cells expressing physiological levels of the labeled proteins.


Multiphoton Microscopy in the Biomedical Sciences IX | 2009

Localization of protein-protein interactions among three fluorescent proteins in a single living cell: Three-color FRET Microscopy

Yuansheng Sun; Cynthia F. Booker; Richard N. Day; Ammasi Periasamy

Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) methodology has been used for over 30 years to localize protein-protein interactions in living specimens. The cloning and modification of various visible fluorescent proteins (FPs) has generated a variety of new probes that can be used as FRET pairs to investigate the protein associations in living cells. However, the spectral cross-talk between FRET donor and acceptor channels has been a major limitation to FRET microscopy. Many investigators have developed different ways to eliminate the bleedthrough signals in the FRET channel for one donor and one acceptor. We developed a novel FRET microscopy method for studying interactions among three chromophores: three-color FRET microscopy. We generated a genetic construct that directly links the three FPs - monomeric teal FP (mTFP), Venus and tandem dimer Tomato (tdTomato), and demonstrated the occurrence of mutually dependent energy transfers among the three FPs. When expressed in cells and excited with the 458 nm laser line, the mTFP-Venus-tdTomato fusion proteins yielded parallel (mTFP to Venus and mTFP to tdTomato) and sequential (mTFP to Venus and then to tdTomato) energy transfer signals. To quantify the FRET signals in the three-FP system in a single living cell, we developed an algorithm to remove all the spectral cross-talk components and also to separate different FRET signals at a same emission channel using the laser scanning spectral imaging and linear unmixing techniques on the Zeiss510 META system. Our results were confirmed with fluorescence lifetime measurements and using acceptor photobleaching FRET microscopy.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2003

A PIT-1 Homeodomain Mutant Blocks the Intranuclear Recruitment Of the CCAAT/Enhancer Binding Protein α Required for Prolactin Gene Transcription

John F. Enwright; Margaret A. Kawecki-Crook; Ty C. Voss; Fred Schaufele; Richard N. Day


Molecular Endocrinology | 2002

Ligand-selective interactions of ER detected in living cells by fluorescence resonance energy transfer

R. V. Weatherman; Ching-Yi Chang; N. J. Clegg; D. C. Carroll; Richard N. Day; John D. Baxter; Donald P. McDonnell; Thomas S. Scanlan; F. Schaufele


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

CCAAT/Enhancer-binding Protein α Alters Histone H3 Acetylation at Large Subnuclear Domains

Wan Hui Zhang; Roopali Srihari; Richard N. Day; Fred Schaufele

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Fred Schaufele

University of California

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Ty C. Voss

University of Virginia Health System

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Ye Chen

University of Virginia

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