首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
J B Ross  K W Rousslang  L Brand 《Biochemistry》1981,20(15):4361-4369
The direct time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy of the single tryptophan residue in the polypeptide hormone adrenocorticotropin-(1-24) (ACTH) and the fluorescence decay kinetics of this residue (Trp-9) are reported. Two rotational correlation times are observed. One, occurring on the subnanosecond time scale, reflects the rotation of the indole ring, and the other, which extends into the nanosecond range, is dominated by the complex motions of the polypeptide chain. The fluorescence lifetimes of the single tryptophan in glucagon (Trp-25) and the 23-26 glucagon peptide were also measured. In all cases the fluorescence kinetics were satisfied by a double-exponential decay law. The fluorescence lifetimes of several tryptophan and indole derivatives and two tryptophan dipeptides were examined in order to interpret the kinetics. In close agreement with the findings of Szabo and Rayner [Szabo, A. G., & Rayner, D. M. (1980) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 102, 554-563], the tryptophan zwitterion exhibits emission wavelength dependent double-exponential decay kinetics. At 320 nm tau 1 = 3.2 ns and tau 2 = 0.8 ns, with alpha 1 = 0.7 and alpha 2 = 0.3. Above 380 nm only the 3.2-ns component is observed. By contrast the neutral derivative N-acetyltryptophanamide has a single exponential decay of 3.0 ns. The multiexponential decay kinetics of the polypeptides are discussed in terms of flexibility of the polypeptide chain and neighboring side-chain interactions.  相似文献   

2.
The temperature dependences of tryptophan fluorescence decay kinetics in aqueous glycerol and 1 M trehalose solutions were examined. The fluorescence decay kinetics were recorded in the spectral region of 292.5–417.5 nm with nanosecond time resolution. The kinetics curves were approximated by the sum of three exponential terms, and the spectral distribution (DAS) of these components was determined. An antisymbatic course of fluorescence decay times of two (fast and medium) components in the temperature range from –60 to +10°C was observed. The third (slow) component showed only slight temperature dependence. The antisymbatic behavior of fluorescence lifetimes of the fast and medium components was explained on the assumption that some of the excited tryptophan molecules are transferred from a short-wave-length B-form with short fluorescence lifetime to a long-wavelength R-form with an intermediate fluorescence lifetime. This transfer occurred in the indicated temperature range.  相似文献   

3.
Photophysics of tryptophan in bacteriophage T4 lysozymes   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
D L Harris  B S Hudson 《Biochemistry》1990,29(22):5276-5285
Bacteriophage T4 lysozyme contains three tryptophan residues in distinct environments. Lysozymes with one or two of these residues replaced by tyrosine are used to characterize the photophysics of tryptophan in these individual sites. The fluorescence spectra, average lifetimes, and quantum yields of these three single-tryptophan variants are understandable in terms of the neighboring residues. The emission spectra and radiative lifetimes are found to be the same for all three species while the quantum yield and decay kinetics are quite distinct. The variation of the average nonradiative rate constant is correlated with neighboring quenching groups. Quenching by I- correlates with exposure of the tryptophan residue based on the crystal structure. Complex behavior is observed for the time dependence of the fluorescence decay in all three cases, including that of the immobile tryptophan-138 residue. The complexity of the fluorescence decay is ascribed to heterogeneity in the nonradiative rate constant among microstates. Energy transfer between tryptophan residues is inferred to occur from comparison of the quantum yields of the two-tryptophan and single-tryptophan proteins and is discussed in terms of the F?rster mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
A Gafni  L Brand 《Biochemistry》1976,15(15):3165-3171
The monophoton counting technique was used to obtain the fluorescence decay kinetics of NADH (dihydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) bound to LADH (HORSE LIVER ALCOHOL DEHYDROGENAS). It was found that the fluorescence decay of the enzyme complex did not follow a single exponential decay law but that the data could be well described as a sum of two exponentials. The decay parameters of the enzyme complex do not depend on the degree of binding-site saturation. These results are interpreted in terms of a reversible excited-state reaction forming a nonfluorescent product. Fluorescence decay kinetics are also reported for NADH and related molecules in solution. The decay parameters, fluorescence emission maxima, and fluorescence intensities depend on solvent polarity and viscosity.  相似文献   

5.
The fluorescence decay kinetics at different ranges of the emission spectrum is reported for 17 proteins. Out of eight proteins containing a single tryptophan residue per molecule, seven proteins display multiexponential decay kinetics, suggesting that variability in protein structure may exist for most proteins. Tryptophan residues whose fluorescence spectrum is red shifted may have lifetimes longer than 7 ns. Such long lifetimes have not been detected in any of the denatured proteins studied, indicating that in native proteins the tryptophans having a red-shifted spectrum are affected by the tertiary structure of the protein. The fluorescence decay kinetics of ten denatured proteins studied obey multiexponential decay functions. It is therefore concluded that the tryptophan residues in denatured proteins can be grouped in two classes. The first characterized by a relatively long lifetime of about 4 ns and the second has a short lifetime of about 1.5 ns. The emission spectrum of the group which is characterized by the longer lifetime is red shifted relative to the emission spectrum of the group characterized by the shorter lifetime. A comparison of the decay data with the quantum yield of the proteins raises the possibility that a subgroup of the tryptophan residues is fully quenched. It is noteworthy that despite this heterogeneity in the environment of tryptophan residues in each denatured protein, almost the same decay kinetics has been obtained for all the denatured proteins studied in spite of the vastly different primary structures. It is therefore concluded that each tryptophan residue interacts in a more-or-less random manner with other groups on the polypeptide chain, and that on the average the different tryptophan residues in denatured proteins have a similar type of environment.  相似文献   

6.
A power-like decay function, characterized by the mean excited-state lifetime and relative variance of lifetime fluctuation around the mean value, was applied in analysis of fluorescence decays measured with the aid of time-correlated single photon counting. We have examined the fluorescence decay, in neutral aqueous medium, of tyrosine (L-tyrosine and N-acetyl-L-tyrosinamide), and of the tyrosine residues in a tryptophan-free protein, the enzyme purine nucleoside phosphorylase from Escherichia coli in a complex with formycin A (an inhibitor), and orthophosphate (a co-substrate). Tryptophan fluorescence decay was examined in neutral aqueous medium for L-tryptophan, N-acetyl-L-tryptophanamide, and for two tryptophan residues in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase. To detect solvent effect, fluorescence decay of Nz-acetyl-L-tryptophanamide in aqueous medium was compared with that in dioxan. Hitherto, complex fluorescence decays have usually been analyzed with the aid of a multiexponential model, but interpretation of the individual exponential terms (i.e., pre-exponential amplitudes and fluorescence lifetimes), has not been adequately characterized. In such cases the intensity decays were also analyzed in terms of the lifetime distribution as a consequence of an interaction of fluorophore with environment. We show that the power-like decay function, which can be directly obtained from the gamma distribution of fluorescence lifetimes, is simpler and provides good fits to highly complex fluorescence decays as well as to a purely single-exponential decay. Possible interpretation of the power-like model is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (EC 2.7.7.31) is a eucaryotic DNA polymerase that does not require a template. The tryptophan environments in calf thymus terminal transferase were investigated by fluorescence. The heterogeneous emission from this multitryptophan enzyme was separated by time-resolved emission spectroscopy. Nanosecond fluorescence decays at 296-nm excitation and various emission wavelengths were deconvolved by global analysis, assuming that the lifetimes but not the relative weighting factors were independent of emission wavelength. The data were fit to three exponentials of lifetimes tau 1 = 1.4 ns, tau 2 = 4.5 ns, and tau 3 = 7.7 ns. The corresponding decay-associated emission spectra of the three components had maxima at about 328, 335, and 345 nm. The accessibility of individual tryptophan environments to polar and nonpolar fluorescence quenchers was examined in steady-state and time-resolved experiments. In the presence of iodide and acrylamide, the steady-state emission spectra shift to the blue. However, at low quencher concentrations, the emission from the 7.7-ns component (maximum 345 nm) is hardly affected, suggesting that this hydrophilic tryptophan environment is buried within the protein. On the other hand, the red shift in the steady-state emission spectrum in the presence of trichloroethanol indicates that the 1.4-ns component (maximum 328 nm) is an exposed hydrophobic tryptophan environment. The results are consistent with an inside-out model for terminal transferase protein, with the more hydrophobic tryptophan(s) near the surface and the most hydrophilic tryptophan(s) in the core.  相似文献   

8.
The fluorescence of the single tryptophan in Bacillus stearothermophilus phosphofructokinase was characterized by steady-state and time-resolved techniques. The enzyme is a tetramer of identical subunits, which undergo a concerted allosteric transition. Time-resolved emission spectral data were fitted to discrete and distributed lifetime models. The fluorescence decay is a double exponential with lifetimes of 1.6 and 4.4 ns and relative amplitudes of 40 and 60%. The emission spectra of both components are identical with maxima at 327 nm. The quantum yield is 0.31 +/- 0.01. The shorter lifetime is independent of temperature; the longer lifetime has weak temperature dependence with activation energy of 1 kcal/mol. The fluorescence intensity and decay are the same in H2O and D2O solutions, indicating that the indole ring is not accessible to bulk aqueous solution. The fluorescence is not quenched significantly by iodide, but it is quenched by acrylamide with bimolecular rate constant of 5 x 10(8) M-1 s-1. Static and dynamic light scattering measurements show that the enzyme is a tetramer in solution with hydrodynamic radius of 40 A. Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropies indicate that the tryptophan is immobile. The allosteric transition has little effect on the fluorescence properties. The fluorescence results are related to the x-ray structure.  相似文献   

9.
Steady state and time-resolved fluorescence studies on native, desulpho and deflavo xanthine oxidase (XO) have been carried out to investigate the conformational changes associated with the replacement of the molybdenum double bonded sulphur by oxygen and the removal of the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). The steady state quenching experiments of the intrinsic tryptophan residues of the enzyme show that all the nine tryptophans are accessible to neutral quencher, acrylamide, in the native as well as desulpho and deflavo enzymes. However, the number of the tryptophan residues accessible to the ionic quenchers, potassium iodide and cesium chloride, increases upon removal of the FAD centre from the enzyme. This indicates that two tryptophan residues move out from the core of the enzyme to the solvent upon the removal of the FAD. The time-resolved fluorescence studies were carried out on the native, desulpho and deflavo XO by means of the time-correlated single photon counting technique, and the data were analysed by discrete exponential and maximum entropy methods. The results show that the fluorescence decay curve fitted best to a three-exponential model with lifetimes tau(1)=0.4, tau(2)=1.4 and tau(3)=3.0 ns for the native and desulpho XO, and tau(1)=0.7, tau(2)=1.7 and tau(3)=4.8 ns for the deflavo XO. The replacement of the molybdenum double bonded sulphur by oxygen in the desulpho enzyme does not cause any significant change of the lifetime components. However, removal of the FAD centre causes a significant change in the shortest and longest lifetime components indicating a conformational change in the deflavo XO possibly in the flavin domain. Decay-associated emission spectra at various emission wavelengths have been used to determine the origin of the lifetimes. The results show that tau(1) and tau(3) of the native and desulpho XO originate from the tryptophan residues which are completely or partially accessible to the solvent but tau(2) corresponds to those residues which are buried in the core of the enzyme and not exposed to the solvent. For deflavo enzyme, tau(2) is red shifted compared to the native enzyme indicating the movement of tryptophan residues from the core of the enzyme to the solvents.  相似文献   

10.
Conventional analyses of fluorescence lifetime measurements resolve the fluorescence decay profile in terms of discrete exponential components with distinct lifetimes. In complex, heterogeneous biological samples such as tissue, multi-exponential decay functions can appear to provide a better fit to fluorescence decay data than the assumption of a mono-exponential decay, but the assumption of multiple discrete components is essentially arbitrary and is often erroneous. Moreover, interactions, both between fluorophores and with their environment, can result in complex fluorescence decay profiles that represent a continuous distribution of lifetimes. Such continuous distributions have been reported for tryptophan, which is one of the main fluorophores in tissue. This situation is better represented by the stretched-exponential function (StrEF). In this work, we have applied, for the first time to our knowledge, the StrEF to time-domain whole-field fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM), yielding both excellent tissue contrast and goodness of fit using data from rat tissue. We note that for many biological samples for which there is no a priori knowledge of multiple discrete exponential fluorescence decay profiles, the StrEF is likely to provide a truer representation of the underlying fluorescence dynamics. Furthermore, fitting to a StrEF significantly decreases the required processing time, compared with a multi-exponential component fit and typically provides improved contrast and signal/noise in the resulting FLIM images. In addition, the stretched-exponential decay model can provide a direct measure of the heterogeneity of the sample, and the resulting heterogeneity map can reveal subtle tissue differences that other models fail to show.  相似文献   

11.
Comparison of the fluorescence spectra and the effect of temperature on the quantum yields of fluorescence of Azurin (from Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC-13525-2) and 3-methylindole (in methylcyclohexane solution) provides substantive evidence that the tryptophan residue in azurin is completely inaccessible to solvent molecules. The quantum yields of azurin (CuII), azurin (CuI), and apoazurin (lambda ex = 291 nm) were 0.052, 0.054, and 0.31, respectively. Other evidence indicates that there is no energy transfer from tyrosine to tryptophan in any of these proteins. The fluorescence decay behavior of each of the azurin samples was found to be invariant with emission wavelength. The fluorescences of azurin (CuII) and azurin (CuI) decay with dual exponential kinetics (tau 1 = 4.80 ns, tau 2 = 0.18 ns) while that of apoazurin obeys single exponential decay kinetics (tau = 4.90). The ratio of pre-exponentials of azurin (CuII), alpha 1/alpha 2, is found to be 0.25, and this ratio increases to 0.36 on reduction to azurin (CuI). The results are interpreted as originating from different interactions of the tryptophan with two conformers of the copper-ligand complex in azurin.  相似文献   

12.
A procedure is described for using nanosecond time resolved fluorescence decay data to obtain decay-associated fluorescence spectra. It is demonstrated that the individual fluorescence spectra of two or more components in a mixture can be extracted without prior knowledge of their spectral shapes or degree of overlap. The procedure is also of value for eliminating scattered light artifacts in the fluorescence spectra of turbid samples. The method was used to separate the overlapping emission spectra of the two tryptophan residues in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase. Formation of a ternary complex between the enzyme, NAD+, and pyrazole leads to a decrease in the total tryptophan fluorescence. It is shown that the emission of both tryptophan residues decreases. The buried tryptophan (residue 314) undergoes dynamic quenching with no change in the spectral distribution. Under the same conditions, the fluorescence intensity of tryptophan (residue 15) decreases without a change in decay time but with a red shift of the emission spectrum. There is also a decrease in tryptophan fluorescence intensity when the free enzyme is acid denatured (succinate buffer, pH 4.1). The denatured enzyme retains sufficient structure to provide different microenvironments for different tryptophan residues as reflected by biexponential decay and spectrally shifted emission spectra (revealed by decay association). The value of this technique for studies of microheterogeneity in biological macromolecules is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The rotational dynamics of the single tryptophan of porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2 and its zymogen (prophospholipase A2) have been studied by polarized fluorescence using steady-state and time-resolved single-photon counting techniques. The motion of Trp-3 in phospholipase A2 consists of a rapid subnanosecond wobble of the indole ring with an amplitude of about +/- 20 degrees accompanied by slower isotropic rotation of the entire protein. The rotational correlation times for overall particle rotational diffusion are consistent with conventional hydrodynamic theory. When phospholipase A2 binds to micelles of n-hexadecylphosphocholine, the amplitude of the fast ring rotation decreases. The whole particle rotational correlation time of the enzyme/micelle complex is smaller than the minimum value calculated from hydrodynamic theory. A similar result is obtained for the micelle itself by using the lipophilic probe transparinaric acid. These low values for the particle correlation times can be understood by postulating that an isotropic motion of the fluorophore in the small detergent particles contributes to the angular reorientation of the fluorophore. The internal reorientational motion of the tryptophan in the zymogen, prophospholipase A2, is of larger amplitude than that observed for the enzyme; specifically, the proenzyme exhibits a motion with a significant amplitude on the nanosecond time scale. This additional freedom of motion is attributed to segmental mobility of the N-terminal residues of prophospholipase A2. This demonstrates that this region of the protein is flexible in the zymogen but not in the processed enzyme. The implications of these findings for the mechanism of surface activation of phospholipase A2 are discussed by analogy with a trypsinogen-trypsin activation model.  相似文献   

15.
The fluorescence decay properties of wild-type trp repressor (TR) have been characterized by carrying out a multi-emission wavelength study of the frequency response profiles. The decay is best analyzed in terms of a single exponential decay near 0.5 ns and a distribution of lifetimes centered near 3-4 ns. By comparing the recovered decay associated spectra and lifetime values with the structure of the repressor, tentative assignments of the two decay components recovered from the analysis to the two tryptophan residues, W19 and W99, of the protein have been made. These assignments consist of linking the short, red emitting component to emission from W99 and most of the longer bluer emitting lifetime distribution to emission from W19. Next, single tryptophan mutants of the repressor in which one of each of the tryptophan residues was substituted by phenylalanine were used to confirm the preliminary assignments, inasmuch as the 0.5-ns component is clearly due to emission from tryptophan 99, and much of the decay responsible for the recovered distribution emanates from tryptophan 19. The data demonstrate, however, that the decay of the wild-type protein is not completely resolvable due both to the large number of components in the wild-type emission (at least five) as well as to the fact that three of the five lifetime components are very close in value. The fluorescence decay of the wild-type decay is well described as a combination of the components found in each of the mutants. However, whereas the linear combination analysis of the 15 data sets (5 from the wild-type and each mutant) yields a good fit for the components recovered previously for the two mutants, the amplitudes of these components in the wild-type are not recovered in the expected ratios. Because of the dominance of the blue shifted emission in the wild-type protein, it is most likely that subtle structural differences in the wild-type as compared with the mutants, rather than energy transfer from tryptophan 19 to 99, are responsible for this failure of the linear combination hypothesis.  相似文献   

16.
Binding of Nile Red to tubulin enhances and blue-shifts fluorescence emission to about 623 nm with a "shoulder" around 665 nm. Binding is reversible and saturable with an apparent Kd of approximately 0.6 microM. Nile Red does not alter tubulin polymerization, and polymerization in 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid (Mes) buffer does not alter the spectrum of the Nile Red-tubulin complex. In contrast, polymerization in glutamate buffer results in a red shift, reduction of intensity, and a decrease in lifetime, suggesting an increase in "polarity" of the binding environment. Lifetimes of 4.5 and 0.6 ns fluorescence in Mes buffer are associated with the 623-nm peak and the 665-nm shoulder, respectively. Indirect excitation spectra for these components are distinct and the 4.5-ns component exhibits tryptophan to Nile Red energy transfer. Acrylamide quenching yields linear Stern-Volmer plots with unchanged lifetimes, indicating static quenching. Apparent quenching constants are wavelength-dependent; global analysis reveals a quenchable component corresponding to the 4.5 ns component and an "unquenchable" component superposing the 0.6-ns spectrum. Analysis of anisotropy decay required an "associative" model which yielded rotational correlation times of greater than 50 ns for the 4.5-ns lifetime and 0.3 ns for the 0.6-ns lifetime. Dilution of tubulin in Mes results in an apparent red shift of emission without lifetime changes, due only to loss of the 623-nm component. These data are reconciled in terms of a model with two binding sites on the tubulin dimer. The more "nonpolar" site is located in a region of subunit-subunit contact which accounts for the fluorescence changes upon dilution; this permits estimation of a subunit dissociation constant of 1 microM.  相似文献   

17.
The relationship between beta-sheet secondary structure and intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence parameters of erabutoxin b, alpha-cobratoxin, and alpha-bungarotoxin were examined. Nuclear magnetic resonance and x-ray crystallography have shown that these neurotoxins have comparable beta-sheet, beta-turn, and random coil secondary structures. Each toxin contains a single tryptophan (Trp) residue within its beta-sheet. The time-resolved fluorescence properties of native erabutoxin b and alpha-cobratoxin are best described by triple exponential decay kinetics, whereas native alpha-bungarotoxin exhibits more than four lifetimes. The disulphide bonds of each toxin were reduced to facilitate carboxymethylation and amidocarboxymethylation. The two different toxin derivatives of all three neurotoxins displayed triple exponential decay kinetics and were completely denatured as evidenced by circular dichroism (random coil). The concentration (c) values of the three fluorescence decay times (time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy (TRFS)) were dramatically different from those of the native toxins. Each neurotoxin, treated with different concentrations of guanidinium hydrochloride (GuHCl), was studied both by circular dichroism and TRFS. Disappearance of the beta-sheet secondary structural features with increasing concentrations of GuHCl was accompanied by a shift in the relative contribution (c value) of each fluorescence decay time (TRFS). It was found that certain disulphide residues confer added stability to the beta-sheet secondary structure of these neurotoxins and that the center of the beta-sheet is last to unfold. These titrations show that Trp can be used as a very localized probe of secondary structure.  相似文献   

18.
The intrinsic fluorescence decay of human Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase was measured by frequency-domain techniques. The protein consists of two subunits, each containing one tryptophan and no tyrosine residues. Using a synchrotron radiation source, which allows facile selection of the excitation wavelength, the dependence of the emission decay upon excitation was studied. No significant excitation wavelength effects were found. The two tryptophans contained in the dimer, although fully equivalent and exposed to solvent, showed a fluorescence decay that cannot be described by a single lifetime. Either two lifetimes, or one Lorentzian-shaped continuous distribution of lifetimes, are needed to obtain a good fit. Under identical experimental conditions, control experiments showed that N-acetyltryptophanamide, an analogue of tryptophanyl residues in proteins, decays with a single lifetime. The heterogeneous decay of tryptophan fluorescence in superoxide dismutase is interpreted as due to the presence of static and/or dynamic conformers in the protein that decay with different lifetimes. The two models of discrete lifetimes and continuous distribution of lifetimes are discussed with reference to measurements on holo- and apo-human superoxide dismutase.  相似文献   

19.
G Desie  N Boens  F C De Schryver 《Biochemistry》1986,25(25):8301-8308
The tryptophan environments in crystalline alpha-chymotrypsin were investigated by fluorescence. The heterogeneous emission from this multitryptophan enzyme was resolved by time-correlated fluorescence spectroscopy. The fluorescence decays at 296-nm laser excitation and various emission wavelengths could be characterized by a triple-exponential function with decay times tau 1 = 150 +/- 50 ps, tau 2 = 1.45 +/- 0.25 ns, and tau 3 = 4.2 +/- 0.4 ns. The corresponding decay-associated emission spectra of the three components had maxima at about 325, 332, and 343 nm. The three decay components in this enzyme can be correlated with X-ray crystallographic data [Birktoft, J.J., & Blow, D.M. (1972) J. Mol. Biol. 68, 187-240]. Inter- and intramolecular tryptophan-tryptophan energy-transfer efficiencies in crystalline alpha-chymotrypsin were computed from the accurately known positions and orientations of all tryptophan residues. These calculations indicate that the three fluorescence decay components in crystalline alpha-chymotrypsin can be assigned to three distinct classes of tryptophyl residues. Because of the different proximity of tryptophan residues to neighboring internal quenching groups, the decay times of the three classes are different. Decay tau 1 can be assigned to Trp-172 and Trp-215 and tau 2 to Trp-51 and Trp-237, while the tryptophyl residues 27, 29, 141, and 207 all have decay time tau 3.  相似文献   

20.
A molecular dynamics simulation approach has been utilized to understand the unusual fluorescence emission decay observed for beta-glycosidase from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Solfolobus sulfotaricus (Sbeta gly), a tetrameric enzyme containing 17 tryptophanyl residues for each subunit. The tryptophanyl emission decay of Sbeta gly results from a bimodal distribution of fluorescence lifetimes with a short-lived component centered at 2.5 ns and a long-lived one at 7.4 ns (Bismuto E, Nucci R, Rossi M, Irace G, 1999, Proteins 27:71-79). From the examination of the trajectories of the side chains capable of causing intramolecular quenching for each tryptophan microenvironment and using a modified Stern-Volmer model for the emission quenching processes, we calculated the fluorescence lifetime for each tryptophanyl residue of Sbeta gly at two different temperatures, i.e., 300 and 365 K. The highest temperature was chosen because in this condition Sbeta gly evidences a maximum in its catalytic activity and is stable for a very long time. The calculated lifetime distributions overlap those experimentally determined. Moreover, the majority of trytptophanyl residues having longer lifetimes correspond to those originally identified by inspection of the crystallographic structure. The tryptophanyl lifetimes appear to be a complex function of several variables, such as microenvironment viscosity, solvent accessibility, the chemical structure of quencher side chains, and side-chain dynamics. The lifetime calculation by MD simulation can be used to validate a predicted structure by comparing the theoretical data with the experimental fluorescence decay results.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号