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1.
Mutants of the Tn10-encoded Tet repressor containing single or no tryptophan residues were constructed by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. The Trp-75 to Phe exchange reduces the dissociation rate of the complex with the inducer tetracycline by a factor of 2. The Trp-43 to Phe exchange has no effect on inducer binding. The fluorescence emission spectra of both tryptophan residues are quenched to a different extent by binding of tetracycline: Trp-75 is quenched to zero and Trp-43 to only 50%. It is concluded that Trp-75 is in the vicinity of the inducer binding site. The different fluorescence emission spectra of both tryptophan residues depend on the native structure of Tet repressor. Quenching studies with iodide indicate that the DNA binding motif is solvent exposed in free repressor and moves towards the interior of the protein upon inducer binding. The inducer binding site is in the interior of the protein. The fluorescence of tetracycline is enhanced upon binding to Tet repressor. The excitation at 280 nm results mainly from the change in environment and in part from energy transfer from tryptophan to the drug.  相似文献   

2.
The binding of saccharides to Abrus precatorius agglutinin (APA) was analyzed by fluorescence spectroscopy. Upon binding of specific saccharides, the fluorescence emission maximum of APA (338 nm) shifted to shorter wavelength by 5 nm, owing to the change in the environment of tryptophan. By analyzing the change in the fluorescence intensity at 338 nm as a function of concentration of saccharides, the association constants for binding of saccharides to APA were determined. The results suggest that in the saccharide binding site on each B-chain of APA, there may be a site which interacts with the saccharide residue linked to galactopyranoside at the non-reducing end, in addition to the site which recognizes the galactopyranosyl residue. Fluorescence quenching data indicate that 8 out of 24 tryptophans in APA are located at or near the surface of the protein molecule and are available for quenching with both KI and acrylamide, and 10 tryptophans are involved in the environment to which acrylamide has access but KI does not. Binding of lactose to APA reduced by 4 the number of tryptophan residues accessible to quenchers. Based on the results, it is suggested that the tryptophan residues at the saccharide binding site on each B-chain of APA are present on the surface of the APA molecule, and they are shielded from quenching by KI and acrylamide upon binding with specific saccharides.  相似文献   

3.
Khrapunov S  Pastor N  Brenowitz M 《Biochemistry》2002,41(30):9559-9571
The intrinsic fluorescence of the six tyrosines located within the C-terminal domain of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae TATA binding protein (TBP) and the single tryptophan located in the N-terminal domain has been used to separately probe the structural changes associated with each domain upon DNA binding or oligomerization of the protein. The unusually short-wavelength maximum of TBP fluorescence is shown to reflect the unusually high quantum yield of the tyrosine residues in TBP and not to result from unusual tryptophan fluorescence. The anisotropy of the C-terminal tyrosines is very high in monomeric, octameric, and DNA-complexed TBP and comparable to that observed in much larger proteins. The tyrosines have low accessibility to an external fluorescence quencher. The anisotropy of the single tryptophan located within the N-terminal domain of TBP is much lower than that of the tyrosines and is accessible to an external fluorescence quencher. Tyrosine, but not tryptophan, fluorescence is quenched upon TBP-DNA complex formation. Only the tryptophan fluorescence is shifted to longer wavelengths in the protein-DNA complex. In addition, the accessibility of the tryptophan residue to the external quencher and the internal motion of the tryptophan residue increase upon DNA binding by TBP. These results show the following: (i) The structure of the C-terminal domain structure is unchanged upon TBP oligomerization, in contrast to the N-terminal domain [Daugherty, M. A., Brenowitz, M., and Fried, M. G. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 4869-4880]. (ii) The environment of the tyrosine residues within the C-terminal domain of TBP is structurally rigid and unaffected by oligomerization or DNA binding. (iii) The C-terminal domain of TBP is uniformly in close proximity to bound DNA. (iv) While the N-terminal domain unfolds upon DNA binding by TBP, its increased correlation time shows that the overall structure of the protein is more rigid when complexed to DNA. A model that reconciles these results is proposed.  相似文献   

4.
DNA polymerase (pol) beta is a two-domain DNA repair enzyme that undergoes structural transitions upon binding substrates. Crystallographic structures indicate that these transitions include movement of the amino-terminal 8-kDa lyase domain relative to the 31-kDa polymerase domain. Additionally, a polymerase subdomain moves toward the nucleotide-binding pocket after nucleotide binding, resulting in critical contacts between alpha-helix N and the nascent base pair. Kinetic and structural characterization of pol beta has suggested that these conformational changes participate in stabilizing the ternary enzyme-substrate complex facilitating chemistry. To probe the microenvironment and dynamics of both the lyase domain and alpha-helix N in the polymerase domain, the single native tryptophan (Trp-325) of wild-type enzyme was replaced with alanine, and tryptophan was strategically substituted for residues in the lyase domain (F25W/W325A) or near the end of alpha-helix N (L287W/W325A). Influences of substrate on the fluorescence anisotropy decay of these single tryptophan forms of pol beta were determined. The results revealed that the segmental motion of alpha-helix N was rapid ( approximately 1 ns) and far more rapid than the step that limits chemistry. Binding of Mg(2+) and/or gapped DNA did not cause a noticeable change in the rotational correlation time or angular amplitude of tryptophan in alpha-helix N. More important, binding of a correct nucleotide significantly limited the angular range of the nanosecond motion within alpha-helix N. In contrast, the segmental motion of the 8-kDa domain was "frozen" upon DNA binding alone, and this restriction did not increase further upon nucleotide binding. The dynamics of alpha-helix N are discussed from the perspective of the "open" to "closed" conformational change of pol beta deduced from crystallography, and the results are more generally discussed in the context of reaction cycle-regulated flexibility for proteins acting as molecular motors.  相似文献   

5.
The human MTH1 antimutator protein hydrolyzes mutagenic oxidized nucleotides, and thus prevents their incorporation into DNA and any subsequent mutation. We have examined its great selectivity for oxidized nucleotides by analyzing the structure of the protein and its interaction with nucleotides, as reflected in the fluorescence of its tryptophan residues. The binding of nucleotides decreased the intensity of MTH1 protein fluorescence and red-shifted the emission peak, indicating that at least one tryptophan residue is close to the binding site. Oxidized nucleotides (2-OH-dATP and 8-oxo-dGTP) produced a larger decrease in fluorescence intensity than did unoxidized nucleotides, and MTH1 protein had a much higher binding affinity for oxidized nucleotides. Deconvolution of protein fluorescence by comparison of its quenching by positively (Cs(+)) and negatively (I(-)) charged ions indicated that the MTH1 tryptophan residues are in two different environments. One class of tryptophan residues is exposed to solvent but in a negatively charged environment; the other class is partially buried. While the binding of unoxidized nucleotides quenches the fluorescence of only class 1 tryptophan residue(s), the binding of oxidized nucleotides quenched that of class 2 tryptophan residue(s) as well. This suggests that selectivity is due to additional contact between the protein and the oxidized nucleotide. Mutation analysis indicated that the tryptophan residue at position 117, which is in a negative environment, is in contact with nucleotides. The negatively charged residues in the binding site probably correlate with the finding that nucleotide binding requires metal ions and depends upon their nature. Positively charged metal ions probably act by neutralizing the negatively charged nucleotide phosphate groups. (c) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The prion protein occurs as a globular domain and a leading fragment whose structure is not well-defined. For the ovine species, all of the tryptophan residues are in the initial fragment, while the globular domain is rich in tyrosine residues. Using heme as a spectroscopic probe, we have studied the recombinant prion protein before and after a temperature-induced conformational change. As for most heme proteins, the absorption spectrum of heme-CO displays a red shift upon binding to the protein, and both the Y and W fluorescence are highly quenched. Flash photolysis kinetics of the PrP-heme-CO complex shows a low yield for the bimolecular phase, indicating a pocket around the hemes. By comparing the holoprotein and the truncated sequence corresponding to the globular domain, the stoichiometry was determined to be five hemes for the globular domain and two hemes for the leading fragment. At high temperature, the hemes are released; upon cooling, only two hemes bind, and only the tryptophan fluorescence is quenched; this would indicate that the globular domain has formed a more compact structure, which is inert with respect to the hydrophobic probe. The final state of polymerization is perturbed if the synthetic peptide "N3" (PrP residues 142-166, which include the first helix) is added to the prion protein solution; the temperature cycle no longer reduces the number of heme binding sites. This would indicate that the peptide may alter or inhibit the polymer formation.  相似文献   

8.
Modification of the herpes simplex virus type 1 major DNA-binding protein (ICP8) with reagents and conditions specific for arginine, lysine, and tyrosine residues indicates that surface lysine and tyrosine residues are required for the interaction of this protein with single-stranded DNA. Modification of either of these two amino acids resulted in a loss and/or modification of binding activity as judged by nitrocellulose filter assays and gel shift. Modification specific for arginine residues did not affect binding within the limits of the assays used. Finally, quenching of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of ICP8 in the presence of single-stranded DNA either suggests involvement of this amino acid in the binding reaction or reflects a conformational change in the protein upon binding.  相似文献   

9.
Hsp22/HspB8 is a member of the small heat-shock protein family, whose function is not yet completely understood. Our immunolocalization studies in a human neuroblastoma cell line, SK-N-SH, using confocal microscopy show that a significant fraction of Hsp22 is localized to the plasma membrane. We therefore investigated its interactions with lipid vesicles in vitro. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence is quenched in the presence of lipid vesicles derived from either bovine brain lipid extract or purified lipids. Time-resolved fluorescence studies show a decrease in the lifetimes of the tryptophan residues. Both of these results indicate burial of some tryptophan residues of Hsp22 upon interaction with lipid vesicles. Membrane interactions also lead to increase in fluorescence polarization of Hsp22. Gel-filtration chromatography shows that Hsp22 binds stably with lipid vesicles; the extent of binding depends on the nature of the lipid. Hsp22 binds more strongly to vesicles made of lipids containing a phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylinositol or phosphatidylserine headgroup (known to be present in the inner leaflet of plasma membrane) compared with lipid vesicles made of a phosphatidylcholine head-group alone. Far-UV CD spectra reveal conformational changes upon binding to the lipid vesicles or in membrane-mimetic solvent, trifluoroethanol. Thus our fluorescence, CD and gel-filtration studies show that Hsp22 interacts with membrane and this interaction leads to stable binding and conformational changes. The present study therefore clearly demonstrates that Hsp22 exhibits potential membrane interaction that may play an important role in its cellular functions.  相似文献   

10.
The Myb oncoprotein specifically binds DNA by a domain composed of three imperfect repeats, R1, R2, and R3, each containing 3 tryptophans. The tryptophan fluorescence of the minimal binding domain, R2R3, of c-Myb was used to monitor structural flexibility changes occurring upon DNA binding to R2R3. The quenching of the Trp fluorescence by DNA titration shows that four out of the six tryptophans are involved in the formation of the specific R2R3-DNA complex and the environment of the tryptophan residues becomes more hydrophobic in the complex. The fluorescence intensity quenching of the tryptophans by binding of R2R3 to DNA is consistent with the decrease of the decay time: 1.46 ns for free R2R3 to 0.71 ns for the complexed protein. In the free R2R3, the six tryptophans are equally accessible to the iodide and acrylamide quenchers with a high collisional rate constant (4 x 10(9) and 3 x 10(9) M-1 s-1, respectively), indicating that R2R3 in solution is very flexible. In the R2R3-DNA complex, no Trp fluorescence quenching is observed with iodide whereas all tryptophan residues remain accessible to acrylamide with a collisional rate constant slightly slower than that in the free state. These results indicate that (i) a protein structural change occurs and (ii) the R2R3 molecule keeps a high mobility in the complex.The complex formation presents a two-step kinetics: a fast step corresponding to the R2R3-DNA association (7 x 10(5) M-1 s-1) and a slower one (0.004 s-1), which should correspond to a structural reorganization of the protein including a reordering of the water molecules at the protein-DNA interface.  相似文献   

11.
Khrapunov S  Brenowitz M 《Biochemistry》2007,46(16):4876-4887
The localization of a single tryptophan to the N-terminal domain and six tyrosines to the C-terminal domain of TBP allows intrinsic fluorescence to separately report on the structures and dynamics of the full-length TATA binding protein (TBP) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its C-terminal DNA binding domain (TBPc) as a function of self-association and DNA binding. TBPc is more compact than the C-terminal domain within the full-length protein. Quenching of the intrinsic fluorescence by DNA and external dynamic quenchers shows that the observed tyrosine fluorescence is due to the four residues surrounding the "DNA binding saddle" of the C-terminal domain. TBP's N-terminal domain unfolds and changes its position relative to the C-terminal domain upon DNA binding. It partially shields the DNA binding saddle in octameric TBP, shifting upon dissociation to monomers to expose the saddle to DNA. Structure-energetic correlations were obtained by comparing the contribution that electrostatic interactions make to DNA binding by TBP and TBPc; DNA binding by TBPc is more hydrophobic than that by TBP, suggesting that the N-terminal domain either interacts with bound DNA directly or screens a part of the C-terminal domain, diminishing its electronegativity. The competition between divalent cations, K+, and DNA is not straightforward. Divalent cations strengthen binding of TBP to DNA and do so more strongly for TBPc. We suggest that divalent cations affect the structure of the bound DNA perhaps by stabilizing its distorted conformation in complexes with TBPc and TBP and that the N-terminal domain mimics the effects of divalent cations. These data support an autoinhibitory mechanism in which competition between the N-terminal domain and DNA for the saddle diminishes the DNA binding affinity of the full-length protein.  相似文献   

12.
Fluorescence and NMR relaxation studies have been performed on horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (alcohol: NAD + oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.1) as a function of temperature. Observations of both the intrinsic protein fluorescence and the fluorescence of a noncovalently bound apolar probe, 2-(p-toluidinyl)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid (TNS), indicate that a significant thermal transition occurs in the protein in the range of temperature 0-40 degrees C, and that there are different temperature-dependent forms of the enzyme. The transition between these forms is affected by the binding of specific ligands to the enzyme's active site. Time-resolved fluorescence studies of the two tryptophan residues in the enzyme suggest that this thermal transition occurs around tryptophan-314, which is buried near the intersubunit region. Binding of nucleotide to the enzyme causes a decrease in spin-lattice relaxation time, T1, which may result from a decrease in the number of water molecules bound to the protein. The observed results may be due to the interactions between the structural domains into which the monomer of the protein is folded.  相似文献   

13.
EcoRI DNA methyltransferase contains tryptophans at positions 183 and 225. Tryptophan 225 is adjacent to residues previously implicated in S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) binding and to cysteine 223, previously shown to be the site of N-ethyl maleimide-mediated inactivation of the enzyme (Reich, N. O., and Everett, E. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8929-8934; Everett, E. A., Falick, A. M., and Reich, N. O. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 17713-17719). The fluorescence spectra of the wild-type enzyme is centered at 338 nm indicating partial tryptophan solvent accessibility. Substitution of tryptophan 183 with phenylalanine results in a 45% drop in fluorescence intensity, but no shift in lambda max. DNA binding to the wild-type methyltransferase caused an increase in the fluorescence intensity, while binding to the tryptophan 183 mutant had a quenching effect, suggesting that DNA binding induces a conformational change near both tryptophans. Binding of AdoMet and various AdoMet analogs to the wild-type methyltransferase results in no change in the fluorescence spectrum when excitation occurs at 295 nm, suggesting that no conformational change occurs, and AdoMet does not interact with either tryptophan. In contrast, quenching was observed when excitation occurred at 280 nm, suggesting that AdoMet and its analogs may be quenching tyrosine to tryptophan energy transfer. Protein-ligand complexes were titrated with acrylamide, and the data also implicate conformational changes upon DNA binding but not upon AdoMet binding, consistent with previous limited proteolysis results (Reich, N. O., Maegley, K. A., Shoemaker, D.D., and Everett, E. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 2940-2946).  相似文献   

14.
The effects of modifying the carbohydrate chain and amino acids on the conformation and activity of Millettia dielsiana Harms. ex Diels. lectin (MDL) were studied by hemagglutination, fluorescence and circular dichroism analysis. The modification of tryptophan residues led to a compete loss of hemagglutinating activity; however, the addition of mannose was able to prevent this loss of activity. The results indicate that two tryptophan residues are involved in the carbohydrate-binding site. Modifications of the carboxyl group residues produced an 80% loss of activity, but the presence of mannose protected against the modification. The results suggest that the carboxyl groups of aspartic and glutamic acids are involved in the carbohydrate-binding site of the lectin. However, oxidation of the carbohydrate chain and modification of the histidine and arginine residues did not affect the hemagglutinating activity of MDL. Fluorescence studies of MDL indicate that tryptophan residues are present in a relatively hydrophobic region, and the binding of mannose to MDL could quench tryptophan fluorescence without any change in λmax. The circular dichroism spectrum showed that all of these modifications affected the conformation of the MDL molecule to different extents, except the modification of arginine residues. Fluorescence quenching showed that acrylamide and iodoacetic acids are able to quench 77% and 98% of the fluorescence of tryptophan in MDL, respectively. However, KI produced a barely perceptible effect on the fluorescence of MDL, even when the concentration of I^- was 0.15M. This demonstrates that most of tryptophan residues are located in relatively hydrophobic or negatively charged areas near the surface of the MDL molecule.  相似文献   

15.
The structural and enzymatic aspects of renin are of great interest in hypertension research. In this paper, we examine the solution accessibility of the three tryptophan (Trp) residues of mouse submaxillary gland renin by solute collisional fluorescence quenching. Our studies indicate that there are two "classes" of Trp residues in renin: class I, a class of Trp residues which are at or near the surface of renin and fully accessible to the fluorescence quencher iodide; and class II, a class of Trp residues which are, for practical experimental conditions, totally inaccessible to the aqueous solution. The former class contains 2 Trp residues, while only a single Trp is identified in the latter class. The presence of a tetradecapeptide substrate or a nonhydrolyzable substrate analogue (peptide H-77) lowers the accessibility of iodide to the class I Trp residues. These data indicate that the class I Trp residues are at or near the peptide-binding site of renin. In addition, the finding that the class I Trp residues are quantitatively quenched more efficiently than the Trp model compound indole suggests that the environment of the class I tryptophans may be positively charged, and thus have a higher "local" concentration of iodide. These data, taken together with the available sequence and computer-generated three-dimensional structure of renin, permit us to speculate that the class I Trp residues are Trp-39 and Trp-300. This solution study of renin structure is discussed in light of the known information about renin catalysis and physiology.  相似文献   

16.
EcoRI endonuclease has two tryptophans at positions 104 and 246 on the protein surface. A single tryptophan mutant containing Trp246 and a single cysteine labeling site at the N-terminus was used to determine the position of the N-terminus in the protein structure. The N-termini of EcoRI endonuclease are essential for tight binding and catalysis yet are not resolved in any of the crystal structures. Resonance energy transfer was used to measure the distance from Trp246 donor to IAEDANS or MIANS acceptors at Cys3. The distance is 36 A in apoenzyme, decreasing to 26 A in the DNA complex. Molecular modeling suggests that the N-termini are located at the dimer interface formed by the loops comprising residues 221-232. Protein conformational changes upon binding of cognate DNA and cofactor Mg(2+) were monitored by tryptophan fluorescence of the single tryptophan mutant and wild-type endonuclease. The fluorescence decay of Trp246 is a triple exponential with lifetimes of 7, 3.5, and 0.7 ns. The decay-associated spectra of the 7- and 3.5-ns components have emission maxima at approximately 345 and approximately 338 nm in apoenzyme, which shift to approximately 340 and approximately 348 nm in the DNA complex. The fluorescence quantum yield of the single tryptophan mutant drops 30% in the DNA complex, as compared to 10% for wild-type endonuclease. Fluorescence changes of Trp104 upon binding of DNA were inferred by comparison of the decay-associated spectra of wild type and single tryptophan mutant. Fluorescence changes are related to changes in proximity and orientation of quenching functional groups in the tryptophan microenvironments, as seen in the crystal structures.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated the structure of the active RecA-DNA complex by analyzing the environment of tyrosine residue 65, which is on the DNA-binding surface of the protein. We prepared a modified RecA protein in which the tyrosine residue was replaced by tryptophan, a natural fluorescent reporter, and measured the change in its fluorescence upon binding of DNA and cofactor. The fluorescence of the inserted tryptophan 65 (Trp65) was centered at 345 nm, indicating a partly exposed residue. Binding cofactor, adenosine 5'-O-3-thiotriphosphate (ATPgammaS), alone at a low salt concentration did not change the fluorescence of Trp65, confirming that the residue is not close to the nucleotide. In contrast, the binding of single-stranded DNA quenched the fluorescence of Trp65 in both the presence and absence of ATPgammaS. Trp65 fluorescence was also quenched upon binding a second DNA strand. The fluorescence change depended upon the presence and absence of ATPgammaS, reflecting the difference in the DNA binding. These results indicate that residue 65 is close to both the first and second DNA strands. The degree of quenching depended upon the base composition of DNA, suggesting that the residue 65 interacts with the DNA bases. Binding of DNA with ATPgammaS as well as binding of ATPgammaS alone at high salt concentration shifted the fluorescence emission peak from 345 to 330 nm, indicating a change from a polar to a non-polar environment. Therefore, the environment change around residue 65 would also be linked to a change in conformation and thus the activation of the protein.  相似文献   

18.
T Heyduk  J C Lee 《Biochemistry》1989,28(17):6914-6924
Cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) from Escherichia coli is assumed to exist in two states, namely, those represented by the free protein and that of the ligand-protein complex. To establish a quantitative structure-function relation between cAMP binding and the cAMP-induced conformational changes in the receptor, protein conformational change was quantitated as a function of cAMP concentration up to 10 mM. The protein conformation was monitored by four different methods at pH 7.8 and 23 degrees C, namely, rate of proteolytic digestion by subtilisin, rate of chemical modification of Cys-178, tryptophan fluorescence, and fluorescence of the extrinsic fluorescence probe 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid (ANS). Each of these techniques reveals a biphasic dependence of protein conformation on cAMP concentration. At low cAMP concentrations ranging from 0 to 200 microM, the rates of proteolytic digestion and that of Cys-178 modification increase, whereas the fluorescence intensity of the ANS-protein complex is quenched, and there is no change in the fluorescence intensity of the tryptophan residues in the protein. At higher cAMP concentrations, the rates of proteolytic and chemical modification of the protein decrease, while the fluorescence intensity of the ANS-protein complex is further quenched but there is an increase in the intensity of tryptophan fluorescence. These results show unequivocally that there are at least three conformational states of the protein. The association constants for the formation of CRP-cAMP and CRP-(cAMP)2 complexes derived from conformational studies are in good agreement with those determined by equilibrium dialysis, nonequilibrium dialysis, and ultrafiltration. Therefore, the simplest explanation would be that the protein exhibits three conformational states, free CRP and two cAMP-dependent states, which correspond to the CRP-cAMP and CRP-(cAMP)2 complexes. The binding properties of CRP-cAMP and CRP-(cAMP)2 to the lac promoter were studied by using the gel retardation technique. At a high concentration of cAMP which favors the formation of the CRP-(cAMP)2 complex, binding of the protein to DNA is decreased. This, together with conformational data, strongly suggests that only the CRP-cAMP complex is active in specific DNA binding whereas CRP and CRP-(cAMP)2 are not.  相似文献   

19.
The microenvironment and accessibility of the tryptophan residues in domain B of PDC-109 (PDC-109/B) in the native state and upon ligand binding have been investigated by fluorescence quenching, time-resolved fluorescence and red-edge excitation shift (REES) studies. The increase in the intrinsic fluorescence emission intensity of PDC-109/B upon binding to lysophosphatidylcholine (Lyso-PC) micelles and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) membranes was considerably less as compared to that observed with the whole PDC-109 protein. The degree of quenching achieved by different quenchers with PDC-109/B bound to Lyso-PC and DMPC membranes was significantly higher as compared to the full PDC-109 protein, indicating that membrane binding afforded considerably lesser protection to the tryptophan residues of domain B as compared to those in the full PDC-109 protein. Finally, changes in red-edge excitation shift (REES) seen with PDC-109/B upon binding to DMPC membranes and Lyso-PC micelles were smaller that the corresponding changes in the REES values observed for the full PDC-109. These results, taken together suggest that intact PDC-109 penetrates deeper into the hydrophobic parts of the membrane as compared to domain B alone, which could be the reason for the inability of PDC-109/B to induce cholesterol efflux, despite its ability to recognize choline phospholipids at the membrane surface.  相似文献   

20.
The dependence of the fluorescence emission maximum of the tryptophan residues in several two-tryptophan-containing proteins (horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase, yeast 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, Staphylococcus aureus metalloprotease and bee venom phospholipase A2) on the excitation wavelengths has been studied. Using fluorescence-resolved spectroscopy, we have dissected the contributions of particular tryptophan residues located in different parts of the protein molecule. The results demonstrate that dipolar structural relaxation can occur in the environment of tryptophan residues buried within protein molecules. The observed spectral shifts upon red-edge excitation of these residues can depend on temperature or ligand binding, as demonstrated in case of metalloprotease and alcohol dehydrogenase. No spectral shifts upon red-edge excitation have been observed for tryptophan residues totally exposed to the rapidly relaxing aqueous solvent.  相似文献   

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