Abstract
2,4,6-Trinitrobenzenesulfonate (TNBS) is an effective quencher of the fluorescence of the 1,1''-dialkyl-3,3,3'',3''-tetramethylinodocarbocyanines (CNdiI). This quenching appears to occur by complex formation rather than a collisional mechanism. This quenching was used to study the transbilayer asymmetry of CNdiI labeling for large unilamellar membranes of egg phosphatidylcholine and the plasma membranes of human red blood cells and of ram epididymal spermatozoa. When CNdiI is added to membranes by ethanolic injection, only the outer leaflet labels. In large unilamellar vesicles of egg phosphatidylcholine, the CNdiI do not appreciably flip flop to the inner leaflet for at least 4 h at temperatures between 4.degree. and 37.degree. C.