QF-Pro Home QF-Pro Glossary Fluorescence Lifetime
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Physical Parameter

Fluorescence Lifetime

The time a fluorophore remains in its excited state before photon emission–an intensity-independent parameter enabling quantitative FRET measurement.

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Definition
Fluorescence lifetime (τ) is the average timeLoading... a fluorophoreLoading... spends in its excited state before returning to ground state by photon emission. Typically 1–10 nanoseconds, lifetime is an intrinsic property independent of fluorophore concentration, excitation intensity, and photobleaching. FRETLoading... causes donor lifetime shorteningDA < τD) proportional to energy transfer efficiencyLoading...–the physical basis for quantitative, intensity-independent interaction measurement.
Fluorescence Lifetime & Why It Matters
Primary
QF-Pro Score: How FRET Efficiency Is Calculated
Primary
Related Segments
Consecutive Tissue Slices: Two-Slide Method
Related
1–10 nanoseconds
Typical fluorophore range
Intensity-independent
Robust to expression variation
FRET detection
Lifetime shortening = interaction
Quantitative output
E = [1 - (τDA/τD)] × 100

The Physical Basis of Lifetime

When a fluorophore absorbs a photon, it enters an excited electronic state (S). The molecule cannot remain excited indefinitely–it returns to ground state (S0) through various decay pathways, emitting a photon in the process of fluorescence.

Fluorescence lifetime represents the average duration of this excited state. For a population of identical fluorophoresLoading... excited simultaneously, the fluorescence intensity decays exponentially:

I(t) = I0 × e-t/τ

Where τ is the fluorescence lifetime–the timeLoading... at which intensity has decayed to 1/e (~37%) of its initial value.

Critically, lifetime is an intrinsic property of the fluorophore in its specific environment. It does not depend on how many fluorophores are present (concentration), how strongly they were excited (intensity), or how many have photobleached. This independence from concentration makes lifetime ideal for clinical samples where protein expression levels vary widely.

Simplified

What It Is: After absorbing light, a molecule stays "excited" for a brief time before releasing the energy as fluorescence. This time (typically nanoseconds) is the fluorescence lifetime.

Simple Analogy: Like a glow-in-the-dark toy—you shine light on it, and it glows for a while before fading. Lifetime measures exactly how fast that fading happens.

Lifetime and FRET Detection

FRETLoading... provides an additional decay pathway for excited donor fluorophores. When an acceptor is within 1–10 nm, energy can transfer non-radiatively rather than through photon emission.

This additional pathway accelerates donor decay, shortening the observed lifetime:

* τD: Donor lifetime without acceptor (unquenched)
* τDA: Donor lifetime with acceptor present (quenched by FRET)

The relationship between lifetime shortening and FRET efficiencyLoading... is direct:

EFRET = [1 - (τDAD)] × 100%

A donor with τD = 4.0 ns that shows τDA = 3.2 ns in the presence of acceptor indicates 20% FRET efficiency–meaning the donor and acceptor are within the FRET-sensitive distance range.

This lifetime-based FRET measurement is fundamentally quantitative. Unlike intensity-based methods that depend on relative brightness, lifetime provides an absolute measurement of interaction state–critical for clinical biomarker validationLoading... where reproducibility across samples, instruments, and institutions is essential.

Simplified

The Connection: When FRET occurs, energy leaves the donor faster (transferred to acceptor instead of emitted as light). This shortens the donor's lifetime.

Detection Method: By measuring lifetime changes, we detect FRET without the complications of intensity-based methods.

Clinical Advantages of Lifetime-Based Detection

  • Expression-independent: Lifetime measurement remains accurate regardless of protein expression level–critical for detecting interactions at low-abundance targets
  • Quantitative reproducibility: fretLoading...-efficiency|FRET efficiency}} calculated from lifetime provides numerical values suitable for regulatory validation and clinical cutpoint establishment
  • FFPE compatibility: Lifetime-based FRET works in archival FFPE tissueLoading... where absolute intensity measurements would be confounded by variable sample quality
  • Instrument standardization: Lifetime can be calibrated across FLIMLoading... systems, enabling multi-site clinical studies with comparable quantitative output

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