Generalized Polarization and time-resolved fluorescence provide evidence for different populations of Laurdan in lipid vesicles
M. Bacalum, M. Radu, S. Osella, S. Knippenberg, M. Ameloot

TL;DR
This study investigates how Laurdan dye's fluorescence properties vary with lipid membrane phases, revealing different Laurdan populations and a bent conformation in membranes through combined polarization, intensity, and lifetime measurements.
Contribution
It demonstrates the correlation between generalized polarization and fluorescence lifetimes, and provides evidence for multiple Laurdan populations and a bent conformation in lipid membranes.
Findings
Positive correlation between GP and fluorescence lifetimes in both lipid phases.
Angular dependence of fluorescence intensity and lifetime reveals membrane phase effects.
First experimental evidence of Laurdan's bent conformation in lipid membranes.
Abstract
The solvatochromic dye Laurdan is widely used in sensing the lipid packing of both model and biological membranes. The fluorescence emission maximum shifts from about 440 nm (blue channel) in condensed membranes (So) to about 490 nm (green channel) in the liquid-crystalline phase (L{\alpha}). Although the fluorescence intensity based generalized polarization (GP) is widely used to characterize lipid membranes, the fluorescence lifetime of Laurdan, in the blue and the green channel, is less used for that purpose. Here we explore the correlation between GP and fluorescence lifetimes by spectroscopic measurements on the So and L{\alpha} phases of large unilamellar vesicles of DMPC and DPPC. A positive correlation between GP and the lifetimes is observed in each of the optical channels for the two lipid phases. Fluorescence intensities, GP and fluorescence lifetimes depend on the angle…
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