How to measure fluorescence intensity time trace?

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Fluorescence intensity time traces monitor the fluorescence intensity over time, requiring specific excitation and emitted wavelengths. The excitation wavelength is less critical as long as the fluorophore's extinction coefficient is adequate in that region. Typically, the excitation wavelength is chosen based on the highest absorbance from the fluorophore's absorbance spectrum, ensuring sufficient separation from the emission wavelength. The emitted wavelength is crucial and is usually selected by measuring the emission spectrum of the fluorophore to identify the peak emission. In certain cases, such as FRET measurements, a different emitted wavelength may be chosen to reduce crosstalk from other fluorophores present in the sample.
Yinxiao Li
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I understand that fluorescence intensity time trace is constantly monitor the fluorescence intensity and plot it over time. But the question is at which excitation wavelength? Also, what is the emitted wavelength that is being measured? I suppose it should be two particular wavelengths, but how is the wavelength selected?
 
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The excitation wavelength does not matter so much as long as the fluorophore's extinction coefficient in that region is reasonable. You could take an absorbance spectrum of your fluorophore, and excite at the wavelength with the highest absorbance as long as there is reasonable separation between that wavelength and the wavelength at which you're monitoring emission.
 
Ygggdrasil said:
The excitation wavelength does not matter so much as long as the fluorophore's extinction coefficient in that region is reasonable. You could take an absorbance spectrum of your fluorophore, and excite at the wavelength with the highest absorbance as long as there is reasonable separation between that wavelength and the wavelength at which you're monitoring emission.

Your answer is very helpful..But--Sorry I missed the part of emitted wavelength...I just changed the question. The extra question is what is the emitted wavelength being measured? The fluorescence intensity should be measured under one particular emitted wavelength, right?

Sorry that this is a simple question...
 
Usually you would measure the emission spectrum of the fluorophore you're using, then choose the wavelength that shows the highest emission. However, for certain applications (e.g. measuring FRET), you might choose a different wavelength to minimize crosstalk from other fluorophores in your sample.
 
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