Abstract: | A method of Monte Carlo calculations has been applied to the problem of fluorescence energy transfer in two dimensions in order to provide a quantitative measure of the effects of nonideal mixing of lipid and protein molecules on the quenching profiles of membrane systems. These numerical techniques permit the formulation of a detailed set of equations that describes in a precise manner the quenching and depolarization properties of planar donor-acceptor distributions as a function of specific spectroscopic and organizational parameters. Because of the exact nature of the present numeric method, these results are used to evaluate critically the validity of previous approximate treatments existing in the literature. This method is also used to examine the effects of excluded volume interactions and distinct lattice structures on the expected transfer efficiencies. As a specific application, representative quenching profiles for protein-lipid mixtures, in which donor groups are covalently linked to the protein molecules and acceptor species are randomly distributed within lipid domains, have been obtained. It is found that the existence of phase-separated protein domains gives rise to a shielding effect that significantly decreases the transfer efficiencies with respect to those expected for an ideal distribution of protein molecules. The results from the present numerical study indicate that the experimental application of fluorescence energy transfer measurements in multicomponent membrane systems can be used to obtain organizational parameters that accurately reflect the lateral distribution of protein and lipid molecules within the bilayer membrane. |