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1.
By gel filtration and titration on DEAE-cellulose filters we show that Escherichia coli tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase forms tryptophanyl adenylate as an initial reaction product when the enzyme is mixed with ATP-Mg and tryptophan. This reaction precedes the synthesis of the tryptophanyl-ATP ester known to be formed by this enzyme. The stoichiometry of tryptophanyl adenylate synthesis is 2 mol per mole of dimeric enzyme. When this reaction is studied either by the stopped-flow method, by the fluorescence changes of the enzyme, or by radioactive ATP depletion, three successive chemical processes are identified. The first two processes correspond to the synthesis of the two adenylates, at very different rates. The rate constants of tryptophanyl adenylate synthesis are respectively 146 +/- 17 s-1 and 3.3 +/- 0.9 s-1. The third process is the synthesis of tryptophanyl-ATP, the rate constant of which is 0.025 s-1. The Michaelis constants for ATP and for tryptophan in the activation reaction are respectively 179 +/- 35 microM and 23.9 +/- 7.9 microM, for the fast site, and 116 +/- 45 microM and 3.7 +/- 2.2 microM, for the slow site. No synergy between ATP and tryptophan can be evidenced. The data are interpreted as showing positive cooperativity between the subunits associated with conformational changes evidenced by fluorometric methods. The pyrophosphorolysis of tryptophanyl adenylate presents a Michaelian behavior for both sites, and the rate constant of the reverse reaction is 360 +/- 10 s-1 with a binding constant of 196 +/- 12 microM for inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Sequence-specific interactions between aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases and their cognate tRNAs ensure both accurate RNA recognition and the efficient catalysis of aminoacylation. The effects of tRNA(Trp)variants on the aminoacylation reaction catalyzed by wild-type Escherichia coli tryptophanyl-tRNA synthe-tase (TrpRS) have now been investigated by stopped-flow fluorimetry, which allowed a pre-steady-state analysis to be undertaken. This showed that tRNA(Trp)identity has some effect on the ability of tRNA to bind the reaction intermediate TrpRS-tryptophanyl-adenylate, but predominantly affects the rate at which trypto-phan is transferred from TrpRS-tryptophanyl adenylate to tRNA. Use of the binding ( K (tRNA)) and rate constants ( k (4)) to determine the energetic levels of the various species in the aminoacylation reaction showed a difference of approximately 2 kcal mol(-1)in the barrier to transition state formation compared to wild-type for both tRNA(Trp)A-->C73 and. These results directly show that tRNA identity contributes to the degree of complementarity to the transition state for tRNA charging in the active site of an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase:aminoacyl-adenylate:tRNA complex.  相似文献   

3.
M Merle  P V Graves  B Labouesse 《Biochemistry》1984,23(8):1716-1723
The formation of tryptophanyl adenylate catalyzed by tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase from beef pancreas has been studied by stopped-flow analysis under conditions where the concentration of one of the substrates was largely decreasing during the time course of the reaction. Under such conditions a nonlinear regression analysis of the formation of the adenylate (adenylate vs. time curve) at several initial tryptophan and enzyme concentrations gave an accurate determination of both binding constants of this substrate. The use of the jackknife procedure according to Cornish - Bowden & Wong [ Cornish - Bowden , A., & Wong , J.J. (1978) Biochem. J. 175, 969-976] gave the limit of confidence of these constants. This approach confirmed that tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase presents a kinetic anticooperativity toward tryptophan in the activation reaction that closely parallels the anticooperativity found for tryptophan binding at equilibrium. Both sites are simultaneously forming the adenylate. The dissociation constants obtained under the present pre-steady-state conditions for tryptophan are KT1 = 1.6 +/- 0.5 microM and KT2 = 18.5 +/- 3.0 microM at pH 8.0, 25 degrees C. The rate constant kf of adenylate formation is identical for both active sites (kf = 42 +/- 5 s-1). The substrate depletion method presently used, linked to the jackknife procedure, proves to be particularly suitable for the determination of the kinetic constants and for the discrimination between different possible kinetic models of dimeric enzyme with high substrate affinity. In such a case this method is more reliable than the conventional method using substrate concentrations in high excess over that of the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
We introduced into a stringent Escherichia coli tryptophan auxotroph a plasmid bearing the tRNA(Trp) gene under the control of an inducible promoter. This allows us to manipulate the total concentration of tRNA(Trp) in the cell according to whether and when inducer is added to the culture. We also manipulated the concentration of Trp-tRNA(Trp) in vivo since the strain used bears a mutation in the Trp-tRNA synthetase affecting the Km for tryptophan, such that varying the exogenous concentration of tryptophan led to variation in the level of Trp-tRNA(Trp) in the cell. With this system, we found that the signal eliciting ppGpp synthesis during a stringent response triggered by tryptophan limitation did not depend on the absolute concentration of either charged or uncharged tRNA(Trp) but rather depended on a decline in the ratio of charged/uncharged tRNA(Trp). In addition, we found that the amplitude of the response, once triggered by tryptophan limitation, was determined by the total concentration of tRNA(Trp) present in the cell (which is mostly uncharged at that point in time). However, excess uncharged tRNA(Trp) did not amplify ppGpp synthesis triggered by limitation of a different amino acid. These data provide in vivo support for the in vitro-derived model of ppGpp synthesis on ribosomes.  相似文献   

5.
Bovee ML  Pierce MA  Francklyn CS 《Biochemistry》2003,42(51):15102-15113
Threonyl-tRNA synthetase (ThrRS) must discriminate among closely related amino acids to maintain the fidelity of protein synthesis. Here, a pre-steady state kinetic analysis of the ThRS-catalyzed adenylation reaction was carried out by monitoring changes in intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. Stopped flow fluorimetry for the forward reaction gave a saturable fluorescence quench whose apparent rate increased hyperbolically with ATP concentration, consistent with a two-step mechanism in which rapid substrate binding precedes an isomerization step. From similar experiments, the equilibrium dissociation constants for dissociation of ATP from the E.Thr complex (K(3) = 450 +/- 180 microM) and threonine from the E.ATP complex (K'(4) = 135 microM) and the forward rate constant for adenylation (k(+5) = 29 +/- 4 s(-1)) were determined. A saturable fluorescence increase accompanied the pyrophosphorolysis of the E.Thr - AMP complex, affording the dissociation constant for PP(i) (K(6) = 170 +/- 50 microM) and the reverse rate constant (k(-5) = 47 +/- 4 s(-1)). The longer side chain of beta-hydroxynorvaline increased the apparent dissociation constant (K(4[HNV]) = 6.8 +/- 2.8 mM) with only a small reduction in the forward rate (k'(+5[HNV]) = 20 +/- 3.1 s(-1)). In contrast, two nonproductive substrates, threoninol and the adenylate analogue 5'-O-[N-(L-threonyl)sulfamoyl]adenosine (Thr-AMS), exhibited linear increases in k(app) with ligand concentration, suggesting that their binding is slow relative to isomerization. The proposed mechanism is consistent with steady state kinetic parameters. The role of threonine binding loop residue Trp434 in fluorescence changes was established by mutagenesis. The combined kinetic and molecular genetic analyses presented here support the principle of induced fit in the ThrRS-catalyzed adenylation reaction, in which substrate binding drives conformational changes that orient substrates and active site groups for catalysis.  相似文献   

6.
The aminoacylation reaction catalyzed by the dimeric tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase from beef pancreas was studied under pre-steady-state conditions by the quenched-flow method. The transfer of tryptophan to tRNATrp was monitored by using preformed enzyme-bis(tryptophanyl adenylate) complex. Combinations of either unlabeled or L-[14C]tryptophan-labeled tryptophanyl adenylate and of aminoacylation incubation mixtures containing either unlabeled tryptophan or L-[14C]tryptophan were used. We measured either the formation of a single labeled aminoacyl-tRNATrp per enzyme subunit or the turnover of labeled aminoacyl-tRNATrp synthesis. Four models were proposed to analyze the experimental data: (A) two independent and nonequivalent subunits; (B) a single active subunit (subunits presenting absolute "half-of-the-sites reactivity"); (C) alternate functioning of the subunits (flip-flop mechanism); (D) random functioning of the subunits with half-of-the-sites reactivity. The equations corresponding to the formation of labeled tryptophanyl-tRNATrp under each labeling condition were derived for each model. By use of least-squares criteria, the experimental curves were fitted with the four models, and it was possible to disregard models B and C as likely mechanisms. Complementary experiments, in which there was no significant excess of ATP-Mg over the enzyme-adenylate complex, emphasized an activator effect of free L-tryptophan on the rate of aminoacylation. This result disfavored model A. Model D was in agreement with all data. The analyses showed that the transfer step was not the major limiting reaction in the overall aminoacylation process.  相似文献   

7.
Ewalt KL  Yang XL  Otero FJ  Liu J  Slike B  Schimmel P 《Biochemistry》2005,44(11):4216-4221
In cellular environments, coupled hydrolytic reactions are used to force efficient product formation in enzyme-catalyzed reactions. In the first step of protein synthesis, aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases react with amino acid and ATP to form an enzyme-bound adenylate that, in the next step, reacts with tRNA to form aminoacyl-tRNA. The reaction liberates pyrophosphate (PP(i)) which, in turn, can be hydrolyzed by pyrophosphatase to drive efficient aminoacylation. A potential polymorphic variant of human tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase is shown here to sequester tryptophanyl adenylate. The bound adenylate does not react efficiently with the liberated PP(i) that normally competes with tRNA to resynthesize ATP and free amino acid. Structural analysis of this variant showed that residues needed for binding ATP phosphates and thus PP(i) were reoriented from their conformations in the structure of the more common sequence variant. Significantly, the reorientation does not affect reaction with tRNA, so that efficient aminoacylation is achieved.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
As a continuation of our studies on plant (yellow lupin, Lupinus luteus) aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases we describe here formation and some properties of valyl-tRNA synthetase-bound valyl adenylate (EVal(Val-AMP)) and seryl-tRNA synthetase-bound seryl adenylate (ESer(Ser-AMP)). Valyl-tRNA synthetase-bound valyl adenylate was detected and isolated by several approaches in the pH range 6--10. In that range inorganic pyrophosphatase increases the amount of valyl adenylate by factor 1.8 regardless of pH. 50% of valine from the EVal(Val-AMP) complex isolated by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration was transferred to tRNA with a rate constant greater than 4 min-1 (pH 6.2, 10 degrees C). The ratio of valine to AMP in the enzyme-bound valyl adenylate is 1 : 1 and it is not changed by the presence of periodate-oxidized tRNA. In contrast to enzyme-bound valyl adenylate, formation of ESer(Ser-AMP) is very sensitive to pH. Inorganic pyrophosphatase increases the amount of seryl adenylate by a factor 6 at pH 8.0 and 30 at pH 6.9 60% of serine from the ESer(Ser-AMP) complex was transferred to tRNA with a rate constant greater than 4 min-1 (pH 8.0, 0 degrees C). The ratio of serine to AMP in the enzyme-bound seryl adenylate is 1 : 1. The rate of synthesis of the enzyme-bound aminoacyl adenylates was measured by ATP-PPi exchange. Michaelis constants for the substrates of valyl-tRNA and seryl-tRNA synthetases in ATP-PPi exchange were determined. Effects of pH, MgCl2 and KCl on the initial velocity of aminoacyl adenylate formation are described. For comparison, catalytic indices in the aminoacylation reactions catalyzed by both lupin enzymes are given and effects of pH, MgCl2 and KCl on tRNA aminoacylation are presented as well. Under some conditions, e.g. at low pH or high salt concentration, lupin valyl-tRNA and seryl-tRNA synthetase are active exclusively in ATP-PPi exchange reaction.  相似文献   

11.
M Pak  L Pallanck  L H Schulman 《Biochemistry》1992,31(13):3303-3309
The role of the anticodon and discriminator base in aminoacylation of tRNAs with tryptophan has been explored using a recently developed in vivo assay based on initiation of protein synthesis by mischarged mutants of the Escherichia coli initiator tRNA. Substitution of the methionine anticodon CAU with the tryptophan anticodon CCA caused tRNA(fMet) to be aminoacylated with both methionine and tryptophan in vivo, as determined by analysis of the amino acids inserted by the mutant tRNA at the translational start site of a reporter protein containing a tryptophan initiation codon. Conversion of the discriminator base of tRNA(CCA)fMet from A73 to G73, the base present in tRNA(Trp), eliminated the in vivo methionine acceptor activity of the tRNA and resulted in complete charging with tryptophan. Single base changes in the anticodon of tRNA(CCA)fMet containing G73 from CCA to UCA, GCA, CAA, and CCG (changes underlined) essentially abolished tryptophan insertion, showing that all three anticodon bases specify the tryptophan identity of the tRNA. The important role of G73 in tryptophan identity was confirmed using mutants of an opal suppressor derivative of tRNA(Trp). Substitution of G73 with A73, C73, or U73 resulted in a large loss of the ability of the tRNA to suppress an opal stop codon in a reporter protein. Base pair substitutions at the first three positions of the acceptor stem of the suppressor tRNA caused 2-12-fold reductions in the efficiency of suppression without loss of specificity for aminoacylation of the tRNA with tryptophan.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Escherichia coli dimethylallyl diphosphate:tRNA dimethylallyltransferase (DMAPP-tRNA transferase) catalyzes the first step in the biosynthesis of the hypermodified A37 residue in tRNAs that read codons beginning with uridine. The mechanism of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction was studied by isotope trapping, pre-steady-state rapid quench, and single turnover experiments. Isotope trapping indicated that the enzyme.tRNA complex is catalytically competent, whereas the enzyme.DMAPP complex is not. The results are consistent with an ordered sequential mechanism for substrate binding where tRNA binds first. The association and dissociation rate constants for the enzyme.tRNA binary complex are 1. 15+/-0.33x10(7) M(-1) s(-1) and 0.06+/-0.01 s(-1), respectively. Addition of DMAPP gives an enzyme.tRNA.DMAPP ternary complex in rapid equilibrium with the binary complex and DMAPP. Rapid quench studies yielded a linear profile (k(cat)=0.36+/-0.01 s(-1)) with no evidence for buildup of enzyme-bound product. Product release from DMAPP-tRNA transferase is therefore not rate-limiting. The Michaelis constant for tRNA and the equilibrium dissociation constant for DMAPP calculated from the individual rate constants determined here are consistent with values obtained from a steady-state kinetic analysis.  相似文献   

13.
J Pimmer  E Holler 《Biochemistry》1979,18(17):3714-3723
The association of phenylalanylptRNA and Mg2+ follows a biphasic concentration dependence as indicated by the active site directed fluorescent indicator 2-p-toluidinyl-naphthalene-6-sulfonate. The macroscopic dissociation constants are 0.16 +/- 0.03 and 4.1 +/- mM. The effect of Mg2+ on the association of enzyme and MgATP, on the synergistic binding of MgATP and L-phenylalaninol, and on the pre-steady-state synthesis and pyrophosphorolysis of the enzyme-phenylalanyladenylate complex in the absence and the presence of tRNA Phe has been measured by established equilibrium and stopped-flow techniques using 2-p-toluidinylnaphthalene-6-sulfonate. At 10 mM Mg2+, the association of enzyme and MgATP is biphasic with dissociation constants of 0.25 +/- 0.03 and 9.1 +/- 1.7 mM. At 2 mM Mg2+, a single dissociation constant of 5.0 +/- 0.5 mM is indicated. The coupling constant of the synergistic reaction is 15 at 1 mM Mg2+ and 290 at 10 mM Mg2+. The Hill constant of the sigmoidal dependence is 3.6. The strengthening of the synergism is believed to reflect a Mg2+-dependent coupling of the synergistic reactions at the two active sites of the enzyme, the coupling being negligible at 1 mM and maximal at 10 mM Mg2+. The pre-steady-state rate of adenylate synthesis is accelerated by the presence of Mg2+. The effect is to decrease the value of the Michaelis-Menten constant of MgATP. Another effect is to increase the rate constant when tRNA Phe is present. At subsaturating [MgATP], the [Mg2+] dependence of the observed rate constant is hyperbolical in the absence and sigmoidal (Hill constant, 3.5) in the presence of tRNA Phe. The rate of the pyrophosphorolysis is enhanced by a decrease of the Michaelis-Menten constant of MgPPi. The effects on the thermodynamics and kinetics parallel the occupancy of the low-affinity Mg2+-binding sites of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
The photoinduced reaction of phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (E.C.6.1.1.20) from E.coli MRE-600 with tRNAphe containing photoreative p-N3-C6H4-NHCOCH2-group attached to 4-thiouridine sU8 (azido-tRNAphe) was investigated. The attachment of this group does not influence the dissociation constant of the complex of Phe-tRNAphe with the enzyme, however it results in sevenfold increase of Km in the enzymatic aminoacylation of tRNAphe. Under irradiation at 300 nm at pH 5.8 the covalent binding of [14C]-Phe-azido-tRNAphe to the enzyme takes place 0.3 moles of the reagent being attached per mole of the enzyme. tRNA prevents the reaction. Phenylalanine, ATP,ADP,AMP, adenosine and pyrophosphate (2.5 xx 10(-3) M) don't affect neither the stability of the tRNA-enzyme complex nor the rate of the affinity labelling. The presence of the mixture of either phenylalanine or phenylalaninol with ATP as well as phenylalaninol adenylate exhibits 50% inhibition of the photoinduced reaction. Therefore, the reaction of [14C]-Phe-azido-tRNA with the enzyme is significantly less sensitive to the presence of the ligands than the reaction of chlorambucilyl-tRNA with the reactive group attached to the acceptor end of the tRNA studied in 1. It has been concluded that the kinetics of the affinity labelling does permit to discriminate the influence of the low molecular weight ligands of the enzyme on the different sites of the tRNA enzyme interaction.  相似文献   

15.
B Ulmasov  A Topin  Z Chen  S H He    W R Folk 《Nucleic acids research》1998,26(22):5139-5141
Mutation of the Arabidopsis thaliana tRNA (Trp)(CCA) anticodon or of the A73 discriminator base greatly diminishes in vitro aminoacylation with tryptophan, indicating the importance of these nucleotides for recognition by the plant tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase. Mutation of the tRNA (Trp)(CCA) anticodon to CUA so as to translate amber nonsense codons permits tRNA (Trp)(CCA) to be aminoacylated by A.thaliana lysyl-tRNA synthetase. Thus, translational suppression by tRNA (TRP)(CCA) observed in plant cells includes significant incorporation of lysine into protein.  相似文献   

16.
The reduction of prostaglandin H synthase compound II by ascorbic acid in the presence of diethyldithiocarbamate was studied in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 8.0) at 4.0 +/- 0.5 degrees C, by rapid scan spectrometry and transient state kinetics. A saturation effect and nonzero intercept were observed in the plot of pseudo-first-order rate constant versus ascorbic acid concentration. The saturation behavior suggests formation of a complex between prostaglandin H synthase compound II and ascorbic acid, whereas the nonzero intercept is attributable to the reaction of compound II of prostaglandin H synthase with diethyldithiocarbamate present in the system as a stabilizing agent. A rate equation has been derived which includes all pathways for the conversion of prostaglandin H synthase compound II back to native enzyme. Kinetic parameters for the reduction of compound II by ascorbic acid were obtained. They are the second-order rate constant of (1.4 +/- 0.5) X 10(5) M-1, S-1, for the formation of the compound II-ascorbic acid complex, the first-order rate constant of (14 +/- 4) S-1 for the oxidation-reduction reaction of the complex and its dissociation, and a parameter, Km of 92 +/- 10 microM analogous to the Michaelis-Menten constant. Thus we demonstrate that a quantitative kinetic study on the prostaglandin H synthase reactions can be performed in the presence of diethyldithiocarbamate.  相似文献   

17.
Using the quenched flow technique the mechanism of seryl tRNA synthetase action has been investigated with respect to the presteady state kinetics of individual steps. Under conditions where the strong binding sites of the enzyme are nearly saturated and the steady state turnover number is about 1 s-1, rate constants of four different processes have been determined: steps connected with substrate associations are relatively slow (12 s-1 for the entire process); activation of serine is the rate determining step (about 1.2 s-1 in presence of tRNASer); whereas the transfer of serine onto tRNASer (35 s-1) and the dissociation of seryl tRNASer (70 s-1) are fast. Similar kinetic parameter seem to hold also for the steady state reactions. This conclusion is based on a detailed study of the substrate, product, and Mg2+ concentration dependence of the transfer reaction. The results also indicate that a second serine binding site is operative. Since the transfer of serine from a preformed adenylate complex onto tRNASer is fast, seryl adenylate seems to be a kinetically competent intermediate of the aminoacylation reaction although, of course, alternative mechanisms cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

18.
Derivation of a steady-state rate equation for the aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases is described, and its suitability for the analysis of various details of the reaction is tested. The equation is applied to the magnesium and spermidine dependences of the isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase reaction. Earlier work [Airas, R.K. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 192, 401-409] is expanded by experiments and calculations of the tRNA kinetics. The analysis suggests the following new details in addition to the earlier results: (a) The binding of tRNA to the enzyme (and not only the rate of the aminoacylation reaction) is affected by the presence of the Mg2+ and spermidine in the tRNA molecule. At least two bound Mg2+ or spermidines are required. (b) tRNA and PPi partly inhibit the binding of each other to the enzyme. (c) The transfer reaction is rather slow, and, at least under some conditions, it participates in rate limitation. (d) A Mg(2+)-induced reduction in the aminoacylation rate seems to be directed to the dissociation of the aminoacyl-tRNA from the enzyme. This dissociation rate is enhanced if a Mg2+ is first dissociated from the enzyme or tRNA. An increase in the Mg2+ concentration shifts the rate limitation from the transfer reaction towards dissociation of the product.  相似文献   

19.
A J Lloyd  H U Thomann  M Ibba    D Sll 《Nucleic acids research》1995,23(15):2886-2892
We describe a convenient, simple and novel continuous spectrophotometric method for the determination of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase activity. The assay relies upon the measurement of inorganic pyrophosphate generated in the first step of the aminoacylation of a tRNA. Pyrophosphate release is coupled to inorganic pyrophosphatase, to generate phosphate, which in turn is used as the substrate of purine nucleoside phosphorylase to catalyze the N-glycosidic cleavage of 2-amino 6-mercapto 7-methylpurine ribonucleoside. Of the reaction products, ribose 1-phosphate and 2-amino 6-mercapto 7-methylpurine, the latter has a high absorbance at 360 nm relative to the nucleoside and hence provides a spectrophotometric signal that can be continuously followed. The non-destructive nature of the spectrophotometric assay allowed the re-use of the tRNAs in question in successive experiments. The usefulness of this method was demonstrated for glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) and tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase. Initial velocities measured using this assay correlate closely with those assayed by quantitation of [3H]Gln-tRNA or [14C]Trp-tRNA formation respectively. In both cases amino acid transfer from the aminoacyl adenylate to the tRNA represents the rate determining step. In addition, aminoacyl adenylate formation by aspartyl-tRNA synthetase was followed and provided a more sensitive means of active site titration than existing techniques. Finally, this novel method was used to provide direct evidence for the cooperativity of tRNA and ATP binding to GlnRS.  相似文献   

20.
M M Werber  Y M Peyser  A Muhlrad 《Biochemistry》1987,26(10):2903-2909
Modification of tryptophanyl residues (Trps) of myosin subfragments 1 (S-1) was performed with dimethyl(2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl)sulfonium bromide (DHNBS). Under controlled conditions, pH 6 at 0 degrees C and 10-min reaction with 10-100-fold molar excess, K+(EDTA) activity was reduced down to less than half, whereas Ca2+-ATPase activity increased and acto-S-1-ATPase was not affected. The number of modified Trps (up to 2.5) agreed well with the number of 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl moieties incorporated in S-1. The thiol groups of S-1 were not affected up to 50-fold molar excess of DHNBS, thus indicating that the modification was selective for Trps. The modification of as few as one Trp caused a blue shift of the emission spectrum, accompanied by a reduction in the fluorescence quantum yield. The accessibility of Trps to the fluorescence quencher acrylamide is drastically reduced upon modification, indicating that DHNBS-reactive Trps are more "exposed" than the DHNBS-refractive ones. DHNBS modification did not seem to affect the ATP-induced tryptophan fluorescence enhancement of S-1. The effect of DHNBS modification of the intrinsic fluorescence of S-1 indicates that the modified Trps are located in a polar environment and that they may be identical with the long-lifetime Trps of Torgerson [Torgerson, P. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 3002-3007]. The most reactive Trp is located in the N-terminal 27-kDa fragment of the S-1 heavy chain. It might also be inferred from the above data that the nonexposed and ATP-perturbed Trp(s) is (are) located in the 50-kDa fragment.  相似文献   

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