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JBC, Vol. 252, Issue 7, 2163-2169, Apr, 1977
L. A. Chen, R. E. Dale, S. Roth and L. Brand
The nanosecond time dependence of the fluorescence depolarization of
1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene in L-alpha-dimyristoyllecithin vesicles was
determined at temperatures above and below the midpoint of the gel-liquid
crystalline transition. In neither case could the decay of the total
fluorescent emission or the decay of the emission anisotropy be described
adequately in terms of single exponential decay laws. At the lower
temperature, the emission anisotropy did not approach zero in the time
window available for measurement, a finding which may indicate that the
range over which rotation of the probe can freely occur is restricted. The
results are discussed in relation to the concept of microviscosity of
bilayer membranes.
Nanosecond time-dependent fluorescence depolarization of diphenylhexatriene in dimyristoyllecithin vesicles and the determination of "microviscosity"
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Lakowicz JR and F. Prendergast Quantitation of hindered rotations of diphenylhexatriene in lipid bilayers by differential polarized phase fluorometry Science, June 23, 1978; 200(4348): 1399 - 1401. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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