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 234 毫秒
1.
Steady-state quenching and time-resolved fluorescence measurements of L-tryptophan binding to the tryptophan-free mutant W19/99F of the tryptophan repressor of Escherichia coli have been used to observe the coreperessor microenvirnment changes upon ligand binding. Using iodide and acrylamide as quenchers, we have resolved the emission spectra of the corepressor into two components. The bluer component of L-tryptophan buried in the holorepressor exhibits a maximum of the fluorescence emission at 336 nm and can be characterized by a Stern–Volmer quenching constant equal to about 2.0–2.3 M?1. The second, redder component is exposed to the solvent and possesses the fluorescence emission and Stern–Volmer quenching constant characteristic of L-tryptophan in the solvent. When the Trp holorepressor is bound to the DNA operator, further alterations in the corepressor fluorescence are observed. Acrylamide quenching experiments indicate that the Stern–Volmer quenching constant of the buried component of the corepressor decreases drastically to a value of 0.56 M?1. The fluorescence lifetimes of L-tryptophan in a complex with Trp repressor decrease substantially upon binding to DNA, which indicates a dynamic mechanism of the quenching process.  相似文献   

2.
Fluorescence and phosphorescence measurements have been carried out on single-p tryptophan (Trp 43 or Trp 75)-containing mutants of Tet repressor (Tet R). Tet R containing Trp 43, the residue localized in the DNA recognition helix of the repressor, has been used to observe the binding of Tet R to two 20-bp DNA sequences of tet O1 and tet O2 operators. Binding of Tet R to tet O1 operator leads to a 78% decrease of the repressor fluorescence intensity, with an accompanying 20-nm blue shift of its fluorescence emission maximum to 330 nm. Upon binding of Tet R to tet O2 operator, the Trp 43 fluorescence intensity is quenched by 60%, and a 10-nm shift of its emission maximum to 340 nm occurs. Solute fluorescence quenching studies, using acrylamide, performed at low ionic strength indicate that in both the complex of Tet R with the O1 and that with the O2 operator, Trp 43 is moderately buried, as indicated by a bimolecular rate quenching constant of about 1.8 × 109 M–1 sec–1. In contrast to the Tet R–tet O2 complex, the Stern–Volmer acrylamide quenching constant K sv of the complex with tet O1 operator changes from 7.5 M–1 at 5 mM NaCl to 22 M–1 at 200 mM NaCl, indicating different exposures of Trp 43 in the two complexes in solutions of higher ionic strength. Phosphorescence studies showed a 0–0 vibronic transition at 408 and 403 nm for Trp 43 and Trp 75, respectively. Upon binding of Tet R to the tet operators, we observed red shifts of 0–0 vibronic bands of Trp 43 to 413 and 412 nm for tet O1 and tet O2 operator, respectively, and the phosphorescence triplet lifetime of Trp 43 at 75 K was quenched from 6.0–5.5 to 3.5–3.3 sec. The thermal phosphorescence quenching profile ranged from –200°C to –20°C, and differed drastically for the two complexes, suggesting different dynamics of the microenvironment of the Trp 43 residue. The luminescence data for Trp 43 of Tet R suggest that the recognition helix of Tet R interacts in different fashions with the tet O1 and tet O2 operators.  相似文献   

3.
Steady-state fluorescence quenching and time-resolved measurements have been performed to resolve the fluorescence contributions of the two tryptophan residues, W43 and W75, in the subunit of the homodimer of the Tet repressor fromEscherichia coli. The W43 residue is localized within the helix-turn-helix structural domain, which is responsible for sequence-specific binding of the Tet repressor to thetet operator. The W75 residue is in the protein matrix near the tetracycline-binding site. The assignment of the two residues has been confirmed by use of single-tryptophan mutants carrying either W43 or W75. The FQRS (fluorescence-quenching-resolved-spectra) method has been used to decompose the total emission spectrum of the wild-type protein into spectral components. The resolved spectra have maxima of fluorescence at 349 and 324 nm for the W43 and W75 residues, respectively. The maxima of the resolved spectra are in excellent agreement with those found using single-tryptophan-containing mutants. The fluorescence decay properties of the wild type as well as of both mutants of Tet repressor have been characterized by carrying out a multitemperature study. The decays of the wild-type Tet repressor and W43-containing mutant can be described as being of double-exponential type. The W75 mutant decay can be described by a Gaussian continuous distribution centered at 5.0 nsec with a bandwidth equal to 1.34 nsec. The quenching experiments have shown the presence of two classes of W43 emission. One of the components, exposed to solvent, has a maximum of fluorescence emission at 355 nm, with the second one at about 334 nm. The red-emitting component can be characterized by bimolecular-quenching rate constant,k q equal to 2.6×109, 2.8×109, and 2.0×109 M–1 sec–1 for acrylamide, iodide, and succinimide, respectively. The bluer component is unquenchable by any of the quenchers used. The W75 residue of the Tet repressor has quenching rate constant equal to 0.85×109 and 0.28 × 109 M–1 sec–1 for acrylamide and succinimide, respectively. These values indicate that the W75 is not deeply buried within the protein matrix. Our results indicate that the Tet repressor can exist in its ground state in two distinct conformational states which differ in the microenvironment of the W43 residue.Abbreviations FQRS fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra - HTH helix-turn-helix motif - TetR tetracycline repressor fromE. coli - WT wild-type TetR - W43 single point mutant with phenyloalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 75 in both subunits - W75 single point mutant with phenyloalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 43 in both subunits  相似文献   

4.
Intrinsic steady-state fluorescence of lactoperoxidase (LPO) and its ligand-bound complexes has been characterized as a structural probe of its structure in solution. On excitation at 295 nm, a broad emission maximum is observed around 338 nm for LPO and for its ligand-bound complexes. The quantum yield is 0.0185±0.0005 for LPO and indicates tryptophan heme energy transfer. Tryptophan residues are located away from heme and are approximately equally distributed among hydrophobic and hydrophilic environments. From Förster resonance energy transfer equations, the average distance between tryptophans and heme within the enzyme is computed to be 25.1±0.2 Å. These fluorescence properties are consistent with the recent theoretical three-dimensional model for LPO and reveal that Trp337 and Trp404 dominate the intrinsic fluorescence, and together contribute 64% of the observed intensity. The effects of the denaturing agents guanidine hydrochloride and urea on the intrinsic fluorescence of LPO and CD of the backbone amide chromophores have been examined. The considerably red shifted emission maximum at 356 nm indicates that tryptophans, buried in the hydrophobic environment, are exposed to the solvent on denaturation. A simple two-state transition between the native and denatured forms of the protein has been used to explain the results. [Denaturant]1/2 5.5 M, determined from both these experiments, indicates that LPO is relatively stable toward the denaturing agents. Quenching studies using. I, Cs+ and polar neutral acrylamide are consistent with this picture. Acrylamide can penetrate the protein matrix. It is an efficient quencher and the quenching process is essentially homogeneous with all the tryptophans being accessible. Cs+ ion is a very inefficient quencher but the iodide ion shows the quenching process to be predominantly heterogeneous with widely differing tryptophan accessibility. The Stern–Volmer constants deduced are K sv =8.4±1.4 M–1 and K sv =4.05±0.65 M–1 for acrylamide and iodide quenching, respectively. The fractional accessibility, f a , deduced is f a =0.52±0.03 for iodide quenching.  相似文献   

5.
Previous studies [Wasylewskiet al. (1996),J. Protein Chem. 15, 45–58] have shown that the W43 residue localized within the helix-turn-helix structure domain of Tet repressor can exist in the ground state in two conformational states. In this paper we investigate the fluorescence properties of W43 of TetR upon binding of tetracycline inducer and its chemical analogs such as anhydro- and epitetracycline. Binding of the drug inducer to the protein indicates that the W43 residue still exists in two conformational states; however, its environment changes drastically, as can be judged by the changes in fluorescence parameters. The FQRS (fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra) method was used to decompose the total emission spectrum. The resolved spectra exhibit maxima of fluorescence at 346 and 332 nm and the component quenchable by KI (346 nm) is shifted 9 nm toward the blue side of the spectrum upon inducer binding. The observed shift does not result from the changes in the exposure of W43, since the bimolecular quenching rate constant remains the same and is equal to about 2.7×109M–1sec–1. The binding of tetracycline leads to drastic decrease of the W43 fluorescence intensity and increase of the tetracycline intensity as well as the decrease of fluorescence lifetime, especially of the W43 component characterized by the emission at 332 nm. The observed energy transfer from W43 to tetracycline is more efficient for the state characterized by the fluorescence emission at 332 nm (88%) than for the component quenchable by iodide (53%) Tetracycline and several of its derivatives were also used to observe how chemical modifications of the hydrophilic groups in tetracycline influence the mechanism of binding of the antibiotic to Tet repressor. By use of pulsed-laser photoacoustic spectroscopy it is shown that the binding of tetracyclines to Tet repressor leads to significant increase of tetracycline fluorescence quantum yields. Steady-state fluorescence quenching of tetracycline analogs in complexes with Tet repressor using potassium iodide as a quencher allowed us to determine the dependence of the exposure of bound antibiotic on the modifications of hydrophilic substituents of tetracycline. Circular dichroism studies of the TetR-[Mg · tc]+ complex do not indicate dramatic changes in the secondary structure of the protein; however, the observed small decrease in the TetR helicity may occur due to partial unfolding of the DNA recognition helix of the protein. The observed changes may play an important role in the process of induction in which tetracycline binding results in the loss of specific DNA binding.Abbreviations FQRS fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra - HTH helix-turn-helix motif - tc tetracycline - TetR tetracycline repressor from Escherichia coli - TetR WT wild-type TetR - TetR W43 single point mutant with phenylalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 75 in both subunits  相似文献   

6.
Studies on the role of endogenous metabolites such as bilirubin and their interactions with biomolecules have attracted considerable attention over the past several years. In this work, the interaction of bilirubin (BR) with purified goat liver cystatin (LC) was studied using fluorescence and ultraviolet (UV) spectroscopy. The fluorescence data proved that the fluorescence quenching of liver cystatin by BR was the result of BR–cystatin complex formation. Stern–Volmer analysis of fluorescence quenching data showed the binding constant to be 9.27 × 104 M−1 and the number of binding sites to be close to unity. The conformation of the BR–cystatin complex was found to change upon varying the pH of the complex. The BR–cystatin complex was found to have reduced papain inhibitory activity. Photo-illumination of BR–cystatin complex causes perturbation in the micro-environment of goat liver cystatin as indicated by red-shift. This report summarizes our research efforts to reveal the mechanism of interaction of bilirubin with liver cystatin.  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the organization and dynamics of tryptophan residues in tetrameric, monomeric and unfolded states of soybean agglutinin (SBA) by selective chemical modification, steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence, and phosphorescence. Oxidation with N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) modifies two tryptophans (Trp 60 and Trp 132) in tetramer, four (Trp 8, Trp 203 and previous two) in monomer, and all six (Trp 8, Trp 60, Trp 132, Trp 154, Trp 203 and Trp 226) in unfolded state. Utilizing wavelength-selective fluorescence approach, we have observed a red-edge excitation shift (REES) of 10 and 5 nm for tetramer and monomer, respectively. A more pronounced REES (21 nm) is observed after NBS oxidation. These results are supported by fluorescence anisotropy experiments. Acrylamide quenching shows the Stern–Volmer constant (KSV) for tetramer, monomer and unfolded SBA being 2.2, 5.0 and 14.6 M−1, respectively. Time-resolved fluorescence studies exhibit biexponential decay with the mean lifetime increasing along tetramer (1.0 ns) to monomer (1.9 ns) to unfolded (3.6 ns). Phosphorescence studies at 77 K give more structured spectra, with two (0,0) bands at 408.6 (weak) and 413.2 nm for tetramer. However, a single (0,0) band appears at 411.8 and 407.2 nm for monomer and unfolded SBA, respectively. The exposure of hydrophobic surface in SBA monomer has been examined by 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) binding, which shows ∼20-fold increase in ANS fluorescence compared to that for tetramer. The mean lifetime of ANS also shows a large increase (12.0 ns) upon binding to monomer. These results may provide important insight into the role of tryptophans in the folding and association of SBA, and oligomeric proteins in general.  相似文献   

8.
Steady-state fluorescence quenching and time-resolved measurements have been performed to resolve the fluorescence contributions of the two tryptophan residues, W43 and W75, in the subunit of the homodimer of the Tet repressor fromEscherichia coli. The W43 residue is localized within the helix-turn-helix structural domain, which is responsible for sequence-specific binding of the Tet repressor to thetet operator. The W75 residue is in the protein matrix near the tetracycline-binding site. The assignment of the two residues has been confirmed by use of single-tryptophan mutants carrying either W43 or W75. The FQRS (fluorescence-quenching-resolved-spectra) method has been used to decompose the total emission spectrum of the wild-type protein into spectral components. The resolved spectra have maxima of fluorescence at 349 and 324 nm for the W43 and W75 residues, respectively. The maxima of the resolved spectra are in excellent agreement with those found using single-tryptophan-containing mutants. The fluorescence decay properties of the wild type as well as of both mutants of Tet repressor have been characterized by carrying out a multitemperature study. The decays of the wild-type Tet repressor and W43-containing mutant can be described as being of double-exponential type. The W75 mutant decay can be described by a Gaussian continuous distribution centered at 5.0 nsec with a bandwidth equal to 1.34 nsec. The quenching experiments have shown the presence of two classes of W43 emission. One of the components, exposed to solvent, has a maximum of fluorescence emission at 355 nm, with the second one at about 334 nm. The red-emitting component can be characterized by bimolecular-quenching rate constant,k q equal to 2.6×109, 2.8×109, and 2.0×109 M?1 sec?1 for acrylamide, iodide, and succinimide, respectively. The bluer component is unquenchable by any of the quenchers used. The W75 residue of the Tet repressor has quenching rate constant equal to 0.85×109 and 0.28 × 109 M?1 sec?1 for acrylamide and succinimide, respectively. These values indicate that the W75 is not deeply buried within the protein matrix. Our results indicate that the Tet repressor can exist in its ground state in two distinct conformational states which differ in the microenvironment of the W43 residue.  相似文献   

9.
We analysed the conformational states of free, tet operator-bound and anhydrotetracycline-bound Tet repressor employing a Trp-scanning approach. The two wild-type Trp residues in Tet repressor were replaced by Tyr or Phe and single Trp residues were introduced at each of the positions 162-173, representing part of an unstructured loop and the N-terminal six residues of alpha-helix 9. All mutants retained in vivo inducibility, but anhydrotetracycline-binding constants were decreased up to 7.5-fold when Trp was in positions 169, 170 and 173. Helical positions (168-173) differed from those in the loop (162-167) in terms of their fluorescence emission maxima, quenching rate constants with acrylamide and anisotropies in the free and tet operator-complexed proteins. Trp fluorescence emission decreased drastically upon atc binding, mainly due to energy transfer. For all proteins, either free, tet operator bound or anhydrtetracycline-bound, mean fluorescence lifetimes were determined to derive quenching rate constants. Solvent-accessible surfaces of the respective Trp side chains were calculated and compared with the quenching rate constants in the anhydrotetracycline-bound complexes. The results support a model, in which residues in the loop become more exposed, whereas residues in alpha-helix 9 become more buried upon the induction of TetR by anhydrotetracycline.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Biotin binding reduces the tryptophan fluorescence emissions of streptavidin by 39%, blue shifts the emission peak from 333 to 329 nm, and reduces the bandwidth at half height from 53 to 46 nm. The biotin-induced emission difference spectrum resembles that of a moderately polar tryptophan. Streptavidin fluorescence can be described by two lifetime classes: 2.6 nsec (34%) and 1.3 nsec (66%). With biotin bound, lifetimes are 1.3 nsec (26%) and 0.8 nsec (74%). Biotin binding reduces the average fluorescence lifetime from 1.54 to 0.88 nsec. Biotin does not quench the fluorescence of indoles. The fluorescence changes are consistent with biotin binding causing a conformational change which moves tryptophans into proximity to portions of streptavidin which reduce the quantum yield and lifetimes. Fluorescence quenching by acrylamide revealed two classes of fluorophores. Analysis indicated a shielded component comprising 20–28% of the initial fluorescence with (KSV+V)0.55 M–1. The more accessible component has a predominance of static quenching. Measurements of fluorescence lifetimes at different acrylamide concentrations confirmed the strong static quenching. Since static quenching could be due to acrylamide binding to streptavidin, a dye displacement assay for acrylamide binding was constructed. Acrylamide does bind to streptavidin (Ka=5 M–1), and probably binds within the biotin-binding site. In the absence of biotin, none of streptavidin's fluorescence is particularly accessible to iodide. In the presence of biotin, iodide neither quenches fluorescence nor alters emission spectra, and acrylamide access is dramatically reduced. We propose that the three tryptophans which always line the biotin site are sufficiently close to the surface of the binding site to be quenched by bound acrylamide. These tryptophans are shielded from iodide, most probably due to steric or ionic hindrances against diffusion into the binding site. Most of the shielding conferred by biotin binding can be attributed to the direct shielding of these residues and of a fourth tryptophan which moves into the binding site when biotin binds, as shown by X-ray studies (Weberet al., 1989).  相似文献   

12.
Water dispersible zinc sulfide quantum dots (ZnS QDs) with an average diameter of 2.9 nm were synthesized in an environment friendly method using chitosan as stabilizing agent. These nanocrystals displayed characteristic absorption and emission spectra having an absorbance edge at 300 nm and emission maxima (λ emission) at 427 nm. Citrate-capped silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs) of ca. 37-nm diameter were prepared by modified Turkevich process. The fluorescence of ZnS QDs was significantly quenched in presence of Ag NPs in a concentration-dependent manner with K sv value of 9 × 109 M−1. The quenching mechanism was analyzed using Stern–Volmer plot which indicated mixed nature of quenching. Static mechanism was evident from the formation of electrostatic complex between positively charged ZnS QDs and negatively charged Ag NPs as confirmed by absorbance study. Due to excellent overlap between ZnS QDs emission and surface plasmon resonance band of Ag NPs, the role of energy transfer process as an additional quenching mechanism was investigated by time-resolved fluorescence measurements. Time-correlated single-photon counting study demonstrated decrease in average lifetime of ZnS QDs fluorescence in presence of Ag NPs. The corresponding F?rster distance for the present QD–NP pair was calculated to be 18.4 nm.  相似文献   

13.
Complexation between Hg(II) and dissolved organic matter (DOM) collected from streams in Ontario, Canada, was studied using three-dimensional excitation emission matrix (3DEEM) fluorescence spectroscopy. The results show that DOM reacted with Hg(II) rapidly, and the complexation reached pseudo-equilibrium within 20 s. Maximum excitation/emission (Ex/Em) wavelengths shifted towards the longer wavelengths, indicating that DOM structure changed during its interaction with Hg(II). Using fluorescence quenching titrations, complexing parameters, conditional stability constants and the percentage of fluorophores participating in the complexation, were estimated by the modified Stern–Volmer equation. The experimental and field survey results suggest that the Hg–DOM complexation in various streams was related to water quality parameters, e.g. DOC, Cl–, and cation concentrations, and was strongly affected by UV irradiation.  相似文献   

14.
Time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence have been used to resolve the heterogeneous emission of single-tryptophan-containing mutants of Trp repressors W19F and W99F into components. Using iodide as the quencher, the fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra (FQRS) have been obtained The FQRS method shows that the fluorescence emission of Trp99 can be resolved into two component spectra characterized by maxima of fluorescence emission at 338 and 328 nm. The redder component is exposed to the solvent and participates in about 21% of the total fluorescence emission of TrpR W19F. The second component is inacessible to iodide, but is quenched by acrylamide. The tryptophan residue 19 present in TrpR W99F can be resolved into two component spectra using the FQRS method and iodide as a quencher. Both components of Trp19 exhibit similar maxima of emission at 322–324 nm and both are quenchable by iodide. The component more quenchable by iodide participates in about 38% of the total TrpR W99F emission. The fluorescence lifetime measurements as a function of iodide concentration support the existence of two classes of Trp99 and Trp19 in the Trp repressor. Our results suggest that the Trp aporepressor can exist in the ground state in two distinct conformational states which differ in the microenvironment of the Trp residues.Abbreviations TrpR tryptophan aporepressor fromE. coli - TrpR W19F TrpR mutant with phenylalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 19 - TrpR W99F TrpR mutant with phenylalanine substituted for tryptophan at position 99 - FQRS fluorescence-quenching-resolved spectra - FPLC fast protein liquid chromatography  相似文献   

15.
Single tryptophan mutants of the trp aporepressor, tryptophan 19-->phenylalanine (W19F) and tryptophan 99-->phenylalanine (W99F), were used in this study to resolve the individual steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence urea unfolding profiles of the two tryptophan residues in this highly intertwined, dimeric protein. The wild-type protein exhibits a large increase in fluorescence intensity and lifetime, as well as a large red shift in the steady-state fluorescence emission spectrum, upon unfolding by urea (Lane, A.N. & Jardetsky, O., 1987, Eur. J. Biochem. 164, 389-396; Gittelman, M.S. & Matthews, C.R., 1990, Biochemistry 29, 7011-7020; Fernando, T. & Royer, C.A., 1992, Biochemistry 31, 6683-6691). Unfolding of the W19F mutant demonstrated that Trp 99 undergoes a large increase in intensity and a red shift upon exposure to solvent. Lifetime studies revealed that the contribution of the dominant 0.5-ns component of this tryptophan tends toward zero with increasing urea, whereas the longer lifetime components increase in importance. This lifting of the quenching of Trp 99 may be due to disruption of the interaction between the two subunits upon denaturation, which abolishes the interaction of Trp 99 on one subunit with the amide quenching group of Asn 32 on the other subunit (Royer, C.A., 1992, Biophys. J. 63, 741-750). On the other hand, Trp 19 is quenched in response to unfolding in the W99F mutant. Exposure to solvent of Trp 19, which is buried at the hydrophobic dimer interface in the native protein, results in a large red shift of the average steady-state emission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The interaction of the nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drug flurbiprofen (FBP) with human serum albumin (HSA) hardly influences the fluorescence of the protein's single tryptophan (Trp). Therefore, in addition to fluorescence, heavy atom‐induced room‐temperature phosphorescence is used to study the stereoselective binding of FBP enantiomers and their methyl esters to HSA. Maximal HSA phosphorescence intensities were obtained at a KI concentration of 0.2 M. The quenching of the Trp phosphorescence by FBP is mainly dynamic and based on Dexter energy transfer. The Stern–Volmer plots based on the phosphorescence lifetimes indicate that (R)‐FBP causes a stronger Trp quenching than (S)‐FBP. For the methyl esters of FBP, the opposite is observed: (S)‐(FBPMe) quenches more than (R)‐FBPMe. The Stern–Volmer plots of (R)‐FBP and (R)‐FBPMe are similar although their high‐affinity binding sites are different. The methylation of (S)‐FBP causes a large change in its effect on the HSA phosphorescence lifetime. Furthermore, the quenching constants of 3.0 × 107 M?1 s?1 of the R‐enantiomers and 2.5 × 107 M?1 s?1 for the S‐enantiomers are not influenced by the methylation and indicate a stereoselectivity in the accessibility of the HSA Trp to these drugs. Chirality 24:840–846, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
In the present study, structural aspects of the two soluble transducers, HtrX and HtrXI, from the archaeon H. salinarum have been examined using UV circular dichroism and steady-state fluorescence spectroscopies. Circular dichroism (CD) data indicate that both HtrX and HtrXI exhibit salt-dependent protein folding. Under low-ionic-strength conditions (0.2 M NaCl or KCl) the CD spectra of HtrXI is similar to that of the Gdn-HCl- or urea-denatured forms and is indicative of random coil structure. In contrast, the CD spectrum of HtrX under low-ionic-strength conditions contains roughly 85% -helical character, indicating a significant degree of folding. Addition of NaCl or KCl to solutions of HtrX or HtrXI results in CD features consistent with predominately -helical character (>95%) for both proteins. In addition, the transition points (i.e., ionic strengths at which the protein converts from random coil to -helical character) are quite distinct and dependent upon the type of salt present (i.e., either NaCl or KCl). Accessibility of tryptophan residues to the solvent was also examined for both HtrX and HtrXI in both folded and unfolded states using Kl quenching. The Stern–Volmer constants obtained suggest that the tryptophans (Trp35 in HtrX and both Trp47 and Trp74 in HtrXI) are partially exposed to the solvent, indicating that they are located near the surface of the protein in all three cases. Furthermore, fluorescence quenching with the single Trp mutants Trp74AIa and Trp47AIa of HtrXI indicates different environments for these two residues.  相似文献   

18.
Copper (II) complex of formulation [Cu–Phen–Tyr](H2O)](ClO4) (Phen = 1,10-phenanthroline, l-Tyr = l-tyrosine), has been prepared, and their induced DNA oxidative cleavage activity studied. The complex binds to DNA by intercalation, as deduced from the absorption and fluorescence spectral data. Scatchard plots constructed from the absorption titration data gave binding constant 2.44 × 104 M−1 of base pairs. Extensive hypochromism, broadening, and red shifts in the absorption spectra were observed. Upon binding to DNA, the fluorescence from the DNA–ethidium bromide system was efficiently quenched by the copper (II) complex. Stern–Volmer quenching constant 0.61 × 103 M−1 obtained from the linear quenching plots. [Cu–Phen–Tyr] complex efficiently cleave the supercoiled DNA to its nicked circular form with gallic acid as biological reductant at appropriate complex concentration. The gallic acid as reductant could observably improve copper (II) complex to DNA damage. The pseudo-Michaelis–Menten kinetic parameters (k cat, K M) were calculated to be 1.32 h−1 and 5.46 × 10−5 M for [Cu–Phen–Tyr] complex. Mechanistic studies reveal the involvement of superoxide anions and hydroxyl radical (HO·) as the reactive species under an aerobic medium.  相似文献   

19.
A simple and selective spectrofluorimetric method for the detection of chlortetracycline (CTC) was studied. In pH 7.4 buffer medium l ‐tryptophan (l ‐Trp), applied as the fluorescence probe, interacted with CTC resulting in fluorescence quenching of the probe. CTC was detected with maximum excitation and emission wavelengths at λex/λem = 275/350 nm. Notably, quenching of fluorescence intensities was positively proportional to the CTC concentration over the range of 0.65–30 μmol L?1 and the limit of detection was 0.2 μmol L?1. Effect of temperature shown in Stern?Volmer plots, absorption spectra and fluorescence lifetime determination, indicated that fluorescence quenching of l ‐Trp by CTC was mainly by static quenching. The proposed study used practical samples analysis satisfactorily.  相似文献   

20.
The Escherichia coli trpR gene encodes tryptophan aporepressor, which binds the corepressor ligand, L-tryptophan, to form an active repressor complex. The side chain of residue valine 58 of Trp aporepressor sits at the bottom of the corepressor (L-tryptophan) binding pocket. Mutant trpR genes encoding changes of Val(58) to the other 19 naturally occurring amino acids were made. Each of the mutant proteins requires a higher intracellular concentration of tryptophan for activation of DNA binding than wild-type aporepressor. Whereas wild-type aporepressor is activated better by 5-methyltryptophan (5-MT) than by tryptophan, Ile(58) and other mutant aporepressors prefer tryptophan to 5-MT as corepressor, and Ala(58) and Gly(58) prefer 5-MT much more strongly than wild-type aporepressor in vivo. These mutant aporepressors are the first examples of DNA-binding proteins with altered specificities of cofactor recognition.  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