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Fluorescent Labeling Profiles

Fluorescent Labeling Principles in Peptide Synthesis

Fluorescent dyes serve as indispensable molecular tools in modern biological analysis. Dye-conjugated peptides are widely utilized as highly sensitive probes in fluorescence microscopy, flow cytometry, and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) assays. Generally, FITC and alternative fluorophores can be site-specifically conjugated to either the N-terminus or C-terminus of a peptide chain. However, N-terminal labeling is highly recommended due to its superior coupling efficiency, significantly shorter reaction times, and ease of synthetic manipulation. Because most peptides are elongated from the C-terminus to the N-terminus during solid-phase synthesis (SPPS), incorporating an N-terminal modification acts as the final terminal step without necessitating additional complex side-chain orthogonal deprotection. Conversely, C-terminal labeling typically introduces steric bottlenecks and requires supplementary multi-step synthetic adjustments, rendering the overall process substantially more complex.

Peptide Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer FRET Microscopic Analysis
Figure 1. Microscopic Visualizations Demonstrating Donor Emission, Acceptor Emission, and Intracellular FRET Signal Tracking via Dye-Conjugated Peptide Probes.

Standard Peptide Fluorescent Modification Profiles

Genixpep provides precise terminal fluorophore anchoring. Below are our standard direct labeling configurations and optimized organic linker modifications designed to minimize spatial hindrance between the target peptide sequence and the fluorescent dye core.

Modification Common Name Direct N-Terminal Labeling N-Terminal Labeling with Linker Spacer
Biotin (Biotinylation) Biotin- Biotin-Ahx-
Fluorescein Isothiocyanate (FITC) FITC- FITC-Ahx-
5-Carboxyfluorescein (5-FAM) 5-FAM- 5-FAM-Ahx-
Dansyl Chloride Dansyl- Dansyl-Ahx-
5-Carboxytetramethylrhodamine (TMR / TAMRA) TMR- (TAMRA-) TMR-Ahx- (TAMRA-Ahx-)

Internal & Side-Chain Dye Conjugation via Lysine Residues

For sequences requiring free terminal ends or multiplexed labeling configurations, Genixpep utilizes the ε-amino group of internal Lysine (Lys) side chains to securely anchor fluorophores across distinct regional segments of the peptide backbone.

Modification Target Probe Peptide N-Terminus Integration Internal Mid-Sequence Integration Peptide C-Terminus Integration
Lys(Biotin) Package Lys(Biotin)- -Lys(Biotin)- -Lys(Biotin)
Lys(FITC) Package Lys(FITC)- -Lys(FITC)- -Lys(FITC)
Lys(5-FAM) Package Lys(5-FAM)- -Lys(5-FAM)- -Lys(5-FAM)
Lys(Dansyl) Package Lys(Dansyl)- -Lys(Dansyl)- -Lys(Dansyl)
Lys(TMR / TAMRA) Package Lys(TMR)- -Lys(TMR)- -Lys(TMR)
Lys(Dnp) Package Lys(Dnp)- -Lys(Dnp)- -Lys(Dnp)

Fluorophore Excitation & Emission Spectral Reference Matrix

To assist researchers in instrument calibration and multi-color channel optical configuration, the table below compiles the exact peak Excitation wavelengths (Ex, nm) and Emission wavelengths (Em, nm) for our comprehensive dye catalog.

Fluorophore / Dye Base Ex (nm) Em (nm) Fluorophore / Dye Base Ex (nm) Em (nm)
7-Hydroxycoumarin 325 386 R-phycoerythrin (PE) (489) 565 578
Dansyl Amide 340 578 Rhodamine Red-X 560 580
AMC 345 445 Tamra 565 580
7-Methoxycoumarin 360 410 Alexa fluor 555 556 573
Alexa fluor Series 345 442 Alexa fluor 546 556 573
Aminocoumarin 350 445 Rox 575 602
Dabcyl 453 Alexa fluor 568 578 603
Cy2 490 510 Texas Red 589 615
FAM 495 517 Alexa fluor 594 590 617
Alexa fluor 488 494 517 Alexa fluor 621 639
FITC 495 519 Alexa fluor 633 650 668
Alexa fluor 430 430 545 Cy5 (625) 650 670
5-FAM 492 518 Alexa fluor 660 663 690
Alexa fluor 532 530 555 Cy5.5 675 694
HEX 535 556 TruRed 490; 675 695
5-TAMRA 542 568 Alexa fluor 680 679 702
Cy3 550 570 Cy7 743 767
TRITC 547 572 Cy3.5 581 596
Regulatory Compliance Notice: All synthetic dye modification portfolios, linker protocols, and optical wavelength datasets presented above are customized exclusively for in-vitro fluorescence microscopy validation, diagnostic fluorophore screening, and preclinical academic laboratory assays. These chemical complexes are not engineered, cleared, or fit for in-vivo diagnostic procedures or direct clinical trial human applications.