Research Keyword: phalloidin binding

Spatiotemporal fluctuations in fluorescence intensity of rhodamine phalloidin–labeled actin filaments

Researchers discovered that fluorescent labels attached to actin filaments (cell structures involved in movement and shape) don’t glow uniformly along their length. Instead, they create a mottled pattern of bright and dark regions. This happens because the filament structure varies along its length, affecting how many labels stick to different parts. Interestingly, when the cell’s energy molecule contains a phosphate group, the filament structure becomes more uniform and the pattern disappears.

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A genetic strategy to allow detection of F-actin by phalloidin staining in diverse fungi

Scientists discovered that many fungi cannot be stained with phalloidin, a widely-used fluorescent dye that helps visualize actin filaments in cells. They traced this problem to a single amino acid difference in fungal actin proteins. By changing this one amino acid back to its original form using genetic engineering, they successfully enabled phalloidin staining in previously incompatible fungi, providing researchers with better tools to study fungal cell biology.

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