This article provides step-by-step instructions for making fully-corrected accurate FRET measurements on individual, freely diffusing biomolecules using the open-source, inexpensive smfBox, from switch on, through alignment and focusing, to data collection and analysis.
The smfBox is a recently developed cost-effective, open-source instrument for single-molecule Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (smFRET), which makes measurements on freely diffusing biomolecules more accessible. This overview includes a step-by-step protocol for using this instrument to make measurements of precise FRET efficiencies in duplex DNA samples, including details of the sample preparation, instrument setup and alignment, data acquisition, and complete analysis routines. The presented approach, which includes how to determine all the correction factors required for accurate FRET-derived distance measurements, builds on a large body of recent collaborative work across the FRET Community, which aims to establish standard protocols and analysis approaches. This protocol, which is easily adaptable to a range of biomolecular systems, adds to the growing efforts in democratising smFRET for the wider scientific community.
Single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) is a technique that measures the FRET efficiency between two dyes-a donor and an acceptor-at the level of individual molecules. FRET is a photophysical process arising from the overlapping energy spectra of two dyes: the donor is excited by light of a specific wavelength and transfers energy non-radiatively to the acceptor, resulting in emission from the acceptor. The efficiency of this transfer is inversely proportional to the sixth power of the distance between the two dyes, so the transfer efficiency varies with distance1. Thus, this FRET efficiency can be used to determine spatial information about the molecule(s)2 to which the dyes are attached, within a range of 3-10 nm. This scale, and the fact that changes in FRET efficiency are sensitive to Angstrom molecular movements3, makes the technique well suited to investigating structural information about biomolecules-such as nucleic acids and proteins-without the complications of ensemble averaging4,5,6. While changes in relative FRET efficiencies can be used to monitor biomolecular interactions and conformational dynamics, shedding light on key cellular processes such as protein (un)folding, transcription, and DNA replication and repair, absolute FRET efficiencies have been used to determine precise distances for biomolecular structure determination7,8,9,10,11, overcoming the need for crystallization or freezing as is required for some other structural methods4,12.
smFRET experiments most commonly take two forms, confocal or total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy. Between both approaches the molecular dynamics of biomolecules can typically be investigated on timescales from pico- to millisecond (confocal, freely diffusing molecules) up to millisecond to hours (TIRF, surface immobilized molecules). This is due to the different setups involved in each technique. In TIRF microscopy, molecules are immobilized on the surface of a slide and excited by an evanescent wave (Figure 1A). Here, however, the focus is on confocal microscopy as this is the format of the smfBox. In confocal microscopy, molecules are not immobilized and instead freely diffuse via Brownian motion through the confocal volume (~1 fL), formed by focusing a laser beam through a high numerical aperture lens into a spot at some designated depth within the solution (Figure 1B). The resulting emission is focused back through the same aperture and filtered through a dichroic mirror (Figure 1C for full schematic). It is then focused through a pinhole in order to remove any out-of-focus light and onto an avalanche photodiode (APD). When the APD detects a photon, it outputs a TTL pulse, the timing of which can be recorded with up to picosecond resolution. The observation time of these freely diffusing molecules within the vicinity of the confocal volume is commonly within the order of milliseconds.
Figure 1: Schematics showing principles of microscopy and the smfBox setup. (A) Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence (TIRF) Microscopy principle: excitation light is directed into the edge of the objective (Obj.) and undergoes total internal reflection at the coverslip-buffer interface generating an exponentially decaying evanescence field to excite surface attached molecules. (B) Confocal Microscopy: Freely diffusing molecules are excited by a near diffraction-limited spot focused into the sample. (C) The smfBox setup used in this protocol, showing all key components: avalanche photodiodes (APD), beam splitter (BS), dichroic mirrors (DM), filters (F), mirrors (M), objective (O) and pinhole (P). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
More recently, smFRET techniques incorporated two color excitation, where lasers matching the donor and acceptor excitation wavelengths are alternated5. This can be done in one of two ways, the first by modulating continuous wave lasers on the KHz timescale, which is known as alternating laser excitation (ALEX)13,14. The second method interleaves fast pulses on the MHz timescale; this is nanosecond-ALEX15 or pulsed interleaved excitation (PIE)16. In all these approaches, information from the acceptor laser leads to calculation of the so-called stoichiometry, which can discriminate between molecules with a low FRET efficiency and those lacking an acceptor (either through incomplete labeling or photobleaching). Using PIE/ns-ALEX additionally gives access to fluorescent lifetimes on the single-molecule level, and anisotropies can be measured when coupled with polarizing optics. This combination of measurements is known as multiparameter fluorescence detection (MFD)9.
Despite the many advantages of smFRET, it is not widely used outside of specialist labs due to the high costs of commercial instruments and a lack of simple, self-build alternatives. A growing trend towards development of low-cost opensource microscopy is taking place and other platforms have recently emerged, including Planktonscope17, OpenFlexure Microscope18, Flexiscope19, miCube20, liteTIRF21, and Squid22. Herein the study describes the protocol for using the smfBox, a recently developed cost-effective confocal set-up capable of measuring the FRET efficiency between two dyes on freely diffusing single molecules. Detailed build instructions and all the necessary operational software are freely available at: https://craggslab.github.io/smfBox/23. The optical arrangement of the smfBox is assembled from readily available components purchased from affordable and widely-accessible manufacturers, while the microscope body (responsible for the majority of the expense in a standard confocal set-up) has been replaced by a custom light-tight anodized-aluminium box (allowing measurements to be made under ambient light conditions). This box houses key optical components, including the excitation dichroic, objective, and pinhole, and a mechanical laser interlock, enabling its safe operation as a Class I laser product (see Figure 1C for a full schematic). The smfBox uses ALEX to validate the dye stoichiometry and to determine accurate FRET correction factors. It is operated using custom-written, open-source software (smOTTER), which controls all aspects of the data acquisition and outputs the data in the open-source photon-HDF5 format24, compatible with many third-party analysis tools. The smfBox and the acquisition and data analysis protocols were recently tested against >20 other instruments (both confocal and TIRF) in a multi-lab blind study25. The FRET efficiencies obtained were in excellent agreement with all the other instruments, despite the smfBox costing only a fraction of the price of commercially available setups.
Here, a step-by-step protocol is outlined for acquiring and analyzing accurate, absolute FRET efficiencies on freely diffusing DNA duplexes using the smfBox, all the way from switch on, through alignment and focusing, to data collection and analysis. The samples used here are three duplex DNAs (exhibiting high-, mid- and low-FRET efficiencies, see Table 1) that were assessed in the world-wide blind study25; however, the method is adaptable to many molecular systems, including proteins and other nucleic acids. The hope is that such a detailed protocol, along with the already existing build instructions for the smfBox23, will help to make this powerful technique even more accessible to a wide range of labs.
1. Power-on components
2. Software 1-Experimental setup
3. Alignment of emission path (not routinely required)
4. Measurement-data acquisition
5. Analysis/software 2
6. Troubleshooting
The protocol necessitates critical assessment of experimental conditions during setup (see protocol step 4.8). The first results acquired which determine success or failure of the experiment are achieved at this stage. A positive result would be to have between five and one bursts per second (see Figure 2B,C). A negative result would be having too many (Figure 2A) or too few bursts (Figure 2D) within that time frame. It remains possible at this stage to rectify these errors: a sample with too high a concentration needs simply to be diluted; if the concentration is too low, however, a new sample may need to be prepared (the determinant being whether it remains possible at this low concentration to collect data in a reasonable time frame).
Figure 2: Screen shots from live trace during experimental setup showing different concentrations of doubly labeled duplex DNA samples. (A) too high, (B) upper acceptable limit, (C) target concentration, (D) too low. Photon counts (1 ms bins) are shown in the three detection channels; donor emission after donor excitation (DD), acceptor emission after donor excitation (DA), and acceptor emission after acceptor excitation (AA). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
A static single-species system would typically require 30 to 60 min of measurement to obtain the necessary ~1,000 bursts needed for robust data analysis. The length of time and number of bursts required will increase with multiple species or dynamic systems. Following data collection and analysis using the protocol figures are exported from the Jupyter notebooks. The alternation plot (Figure 3A) should match the ALEX period of the experimental setup. The time trace (Figure 3B) is used to qualitatively assess that the sample concentration is reasonable. The background plot (Figure 3C) shows the distribution of inter-photon delay periods with a linear fit to the longer times to estimate the background rate26. The background trace (Figure 3D) can identify if there were changes in the sample over the duration of the experiment; primarily this would be due to evaporation during longer acquisition times. ES histograms are generated for all photons (Figure 3E) and doubly labeled species (Figure 3F). Finally, a 1D E histogram (Figure 3G) is generated with gaussian fitting of the burst data.
Figure 3: Example figure output of analyzed data generated by the Jupyter Notebooks. (A) Alternation plot, (B) Time trace, (C) Background determination, (D) Background rates, (E) All photon ES histogram, (F) Dual channel ES histogram, and (G) 1D E histogram. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Name | Sequence |
1a | 5’- GAG CTG AAA GTG TCG AGT TTG TTT GAG TGT TTG TCT GG – 3’ |
3’- CTC GAC TTT CAC AGC TCA AAC AAA CTC ACA AAC AGA CC – 5’ | |
1b | 5’- GAG CTG AAA GTG TCG AGT TTG TTT GAG TGT TTG TCT GG – 3’ |
3’- CTC GAC TTT CAC AGC TCA AAC AAA CTC ACA AAC AGA CC – 5’ | |
1c | 5’- GAG CTG AAA GTG TCG AGT TTG TTT GAG TGT TTG TCT GG – 3’ |
3’- CTC GAC TTT CAC AGC TCA AAC AAA CTC ACA AAC AGA CC – 5’ |
Table 1: DNA sequences used in the protocol. Nucleotides are highlighted in blue and red representing C2 amino modified thymine residues labeled with Atto-550 and Atto-647N, respectively.
Correction Factor Finder Alpha-Delta: Please click here to download this File.
Correction Factor Finder Gamma-Beta: Please click here to download this File.
FRET Analysis 1.4 Corrected: Please click here to download this File.
FRET Analysis 1.4 Uncorrected: Please click here to download this File.
The most critical steps in the protocol are the alignment of the microscope and adjusting the sample concentration to the correct dilution. If alignment is off, then there might be insufficient signal to identify bursts and plot histograms, and if misalignment occurs between samples then accurate FRET correction may fail due to changes in leakage and detection / excitation efficiencies. The use of an appropriate concentration is also important, too high a concentration will give coincident bursts, containing multiple molecules with potentially different FRET efficiencies or labeling stoichiometries. Too low a concentration will give too few bursts for robust data analysis.
The protocol described here is for measuring distances in static single FRET species. If the sample has more than one peak in the FRET efficiency histogram, or peaks appear broad (which can happen with dynamic species), then more bursts may be needed to fit histograms to the same degree of precision. For two well-separated peaks then approximately twice as much data will be needed, but if the populations overlap slightly then even more data is required.
If the two populations interconvert on the time scale of the experiment, the dynamics and kinetics of the system can potentially be determined. Tests such as BVA27 and 2CDE28 can confirm that the intermediate bursts are dynamic in nature, whereas analyses including dPDA29,30 or H2MM31 can determine the rates of interconversion. Jupyter notebooks for BVA and 2CDE are available on the FRETBursts26 website, and the MATLab based software PAM32 can run BVA, 2CDE, and PDA analyses.
Confocal single-molecule FRET can easily observe states much more shortly lived (~1 ms) than TIRF; however, the short observation times, limited by diffusion, give no molecular history, and so cannot determine longer dwell times, or complex transition networks in the way that surface immobilized experiments can.
As the protocol measures freely diffusing molecules at a very low concentration, it works best when measuring intramolecular distances on the same molecule. Intermolecular distances between transiently bound molecules can be measured provided that the Kd of the two molecules is low enough that the complex exists at a significant quantity at the low working concentration required by the experiment (~100 pM). If the Kd is much higher than this, then only singly labeled molecules will be seen. This problem can be overcome by using microfluidics to mix the two labeled components together at a high concentration and then rapidly diluting and flowing over the objective before the complex dissociates33,34.
Measuring FRET efficiencies at the single-molecule level has a significant advantage over ensemble techniques, as it informs on heterogeneous subpopulations, which in an ensemble experiment would be averaged. Furthermore, single-molecule FRET with ALEX gives access to accurate FRET efficiencies, which can be converted to accurate distances. This enables determination of more detailed structural information rather than simply probing relative distance changes. The smfBox carries all these benefits and capabilities but can be constructed on a much lower budget than comparable commercially available microscopes capable of confocal smFRET23.
The smfBox represents a much lower barrier to entry for smFRET techniques, allowing researchers to measure conformational changes, and accurate distances within and between proteins and nucleic acids7,8,9,10,11,35.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors gratefully acknowledge the following funding sources: BBSRC (BB/T008032/1); EPSRC (Studentship to B.A.) and MRC (Studentship to A. R.-T.).
Amino modified oligonucleotide | Eurogentec | N/A | May be ordered from various suppliers or synthesised; amino modification enables labeling with NHS-ester modified dyes |
Avalanche photodiode (APD) | Excelitas | SPCM-AQRH-14 | Two APDs are required for the smfBox setup |
Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) | Merck | A2153 | System dependant; imaging buffer component (0.1 mg/mL in buffer) |
Compact Laser Combiner | OMICRON | LightHUB-2 | 515 nm (80 mW) and 638 nm (100 mW) lasers |
Coverglass | VWR | 630-2742 | Thickness: 0.17 ± 0.01 mm, LxW: 22×22 mm |
Cy3B | Cytiva | PA63101 | 1 mg, PA63100 (5 mg), PA96106 (25 mg) |
FRETBursts Python Package | N/A | N/A | Open-source python package for burst analysis of freely-diffusing single-molecule FRET data: https://fretbursts.readthedocs.io |
Imaging Buffer | N/A | System dependant; 5 mM NaCl, 20 mM MgCl2, 5 mM Tris pH 7.5 and 0.1 mg/mL BSA | |
Immersion Oil | Olympus | IMMOIL-F30CC | |
Jupyter notebooks | Project Jupyter | N/A | Open-source web application to create and share documents that contain live code, equations, visualizations and text; data analysis notebooks for smfBox can be found in the SI |
Lens Tissue | ThorLabs | MC-5 | MC-50E is same item in bulk |
Magnesium Chloride | Merck | M2670 | System dependant; imaging buffer component (20 mM in buffer) |
MilliQ/Ultrapure water | N/A | ||
Nanopoistioner | Piezoconcept | FOC300 | Nanopositioner for accurate positioning of microscope objective |
NHS-ester modified ATTO-550 | ATTO-TEC | AD 550-31 | 1 mg, AD 550-35 (5 mg) |
NHS-ester modified ATTO-647N | ATTO-TEC | AD 647N-31 | 1 mg, AD 647N-35 (5 mg) |
Objective lens | Olympus | N1480700 | Olympus objective series from orignal smfBox discontinued; replaced by N5702300 |
OMICRON Control Center (OCC)- laser control center | OMICRON | N/A | v3.5.34 – OMICRON laser driver software |
Press-To-Seal silicone isolator | Grace Bio-Labs | 664201 | 8-9 mm Diameter x 1.7 mm Depth |
smOTTER | N/A | N/A | Open-source acquisition software for the Craggs Lab smfBox: https://github.com/craggslab/smOTTER |
Sodium Chloride | Merck | S7653 | System dependant; imaging buffer component (5 mM in buffer) |
Tris base | Merck | 93362 | System dependant; imaging buffer component (5 mM, pH 7.5 in buffer) |
Type I ultrapure water | Merck | ZIQ7000T0 | Milli-Q® IQ 7000 Ultrapure Water System |