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1.
J Broos  F ter Veld  G T Robillard 《Biochemistry》1999,38(31):9798-9803
This paper presents a deceptively straightforward experimental approach to monitoring membrane protein-ligand interactions in vesicles and in living Escherichia coli cells. This is achieved via the biosynthetic incorporation of 7-azatryptophan, a tryptophan analogue with a red-shifted absorption spectrum, allowing collection of the emission signal of the target protein in a high tryptophan background via red-edge excitation. The approach is demonstrated for the mannitol permease of E. coli (EII(mtl)), an integral membrane protein of 637 amino acids, including four tryptophans, and single-tryptophan mutants of EII(mtl). By using a tryptophan auxotroph, a high level of 7-azatryptophan incorporation in EII(mtl) was achieved. The change in emission signal of the purified enzyme upon mannitol binding (-28%) was 4-fold larger than with EII(mtl) containing tryptophan, demonstrating the known higher sensitivity of this analogue for changes in the microenvironment [Schlesinger, R. (1968) J. Biol. Chem. 243, 3877-3883]. Changes in emission signal could also be monitored (-5%) when the enzyme was situated in vesicles, although it constituted only 10-15% of the total cytoplasmic membrane fraction. Of the five single-tryptophan mutants, the emission signal of the mutant with 7-azatryptophan at position 198 was the most sensitive for mannitol binding. Changes in emission signal not only were observed in vesicles (-18%) but also could be monitored in viable cells (-5%). The fact that only modest expression levels and no protein purification are needed makes this a useful approach for the characterization of numerous protein systems under in vitro and in vivo conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Membrane-bound transport proteins are expected to proceed via different conformational states during the translocation of a solute across the membrane. Tryptophan phosphorescence spectroscopy is one of the most sensitive methods used for detecting conformational changes in proteins. We employed this technique to study substrate-induced conformational changes in the mannitol permease, EnzymeII(mtl), of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system from Escherichia coli. Ten mutants containing a single tryptophan were engineered in the membrane-embedded IIC(mtl)-domain, harboring the mannitol translocation pathway. The mutants were characterized with respect to steady-state and time-resolved phosphorescence, yielding detailed, site-specific information of the Trp microenvironment and protein conformational homogeneity. The study revealed that the Trp environments vary from apolar, unstructured, and flexible sites to buried, highly homogeneous, rigid peptide cores. The most remarkable example of the latter was observed for position 97, because its long sub-second phosphorescence lifetime and highly structured spectra in both glassy and fluid media imply a well defined and rigid core around the probe that is typical of beta-sheet-rich structural motifs. The addition of mannitol had a large impact on most of the Trp positions studied. In the case of position 97, mannitol binding induced partial unfolding of the rigid protein core. On the contrary, for residue positions 126, 133, and 147, both steady-state and time-resolved data showed that mannitol binding induces a more ordered and homogeneous structure around these residues. The observations are discussed in context of the current mechanistic and structural model of EII(mtl).  相似文献   

3.
The mannitol transporter EII(mtl) from Escherichia coli is responsible for the uptake of mannitol over the inner membrane and its concomitant phosphorylation. EII(mtl) is functional as a dimer and its membrane-embedded C domain, IIC(mtl), harbors one high affinity mannitol binding site. To characterize this domain in more detail the microenvironments of thirteen residue positions were explored by 5-fluorotryptophan (5-FTrp) fluorescence spectroscopy. Because of the simpler photophysics of 5-FTrp compared to Trp, one can distinguish between the two 5-FTrp probes present in dimeric IIC(mtl). At many labeled positions, the microenvironment of the 5-FTrps in the two protomers differs. Spectroscopic properties of three mutants labeled at positions 198, 251, and 260 show that two conserved motifs (Asn194-His195 and Gly254-Ile255-His256-Glu257) are located in well-structured parts of IIC(mtl). Mannitol binding has a large impact on the structure around position 198, while only minor changes are induced at positions 251 and 260. Phosphorylation of the cytoplasmic B domain of EII(mtl) is sensed by 5-FTrp at positions 30, 42, 251 and 260. We conclude that many parts of the IIC(mtl) structure are involved in the sugar translocation. The structure of EII(mtl), as investigated in this work, differs from the recently solved structure of a IIC protein transporting diacetylchitobiose, ChbC, and also belonging to the glucose superfamily of EII sugar transporters. In EII(mtl), the sugar binding site is more close to the periplasmic face and the structure of the 2 protomers in the dimer is different, while both protomers in the ChbC dimer are essentially the same.  相似文献   

4.
Biosynthetic incorporation of tryptophan (Trp) analogs such as 7-azatryptophan, 5-hydroxytryptophan, and fluorotryptophan into a protein can facilitate its structural analysis by spectroscopic techniques such as fluorescence, phosphorescence, nuclear magnetic resonance, and Fourier transform infrared. Until now, the approach has dealt primarily with soluble proteins. In this article, we demonstrate that four different Trp analogs can be very efficiently incorporated into a membrane protein as demonstrated for the mannitol transporter of Escherichia coli (EII(mtl)). EII(mtl) overexpression was under control of the lambdaP(R) promoter, and the E. coli Trp auxotroph M5219 was used as host. This strain constitutively expresses the heat labile repressor protein of the lambdaP(R) promoter. Together with the presence of the repressor gene on the EII(mtl) plasmid, this resulted in a tightly controlled promoter system, a prerequisite for high Trp analog incorporation. A new method for determining the analog incorporation efficiency is presented that is suitable for membrane proteins. The procedure involves fitting of the phosphorescence spectrum as a linear combination of the Trp and Trp analog contributions, taking into account the influence of the protein environment on the Trp analog spectrum. The data show that the analog content of EII(mtl) samples is very high (>95%). In addition, we report here that biosynthetic incorporation of Trp analogs can also be effected with less expensive indole analogs, which in vivo are converted to L-Trp analogs.  相似文献   

5.
Numerous membrane proteins function as oligomers both at the structural and functional levels. The mannitol transporter from Escherichia coli, EnzymeII(mtl), is a member of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system. During the transport cycle, mannitol is phosphorylated and released into the cytoplasm as mannitol-1-phosphate. Several studies have shown that EII(mtl) functions as an oligomeric species. However, the oligomerization number and stability of the oligomeric complex during different steps of the catalytic cycle, e.g., substrate binding and/or phosphorylation of the carrier, is still under discussion. In this paper, we have addressed the oligomeric state and stability of EII(mtl) using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. A functional double-cysteine mutant was site-specifically labeled with either Alexa Fluor 488 or Alexa Fluor 633. The subunit exchange of these two batches of proteins was followed in time during different steps of the catalytic cycle. The most important conclusions are that (1) in a detergent-solubilized state, EII(mtl) is functional as a very stable dimer; (2) the stability of the complex can be manipulated by changing the intermicellar attractive forces between PEG-based detergent micelles; (3) substrate binding destabilizes the complex whereas phosphorylation increases the stability; and (4) substrate binding to the phosphorylated species partly antagonizes the stabilizing effect.  相似文献   

6.
W C Lam  D H Tsao  A H Maki  K A Maegley  N O Reich 《Biochemistry》1992,31(43):10438-10442
The interactions of an arsenic (III) reagent, (CH3)2AsSCH2CONH2, with two Escherichia coli RI methyltransferase mutants, W183F and C223S, have been studied by phosphorescence, optically detected magnetic resonance, and fluorescence spectroscopy. The phosphorescence spectrum of the W183F mutant containing only one tryptophan at position 225 reveals a single 0,0-band that is red-shifted by 9.8 nm upon binding of As(III). Fluorescence titration of W183F with (CH3)2AsSCH2CONH2 produces a large tryptophan fluorescence quenching. Analysis of the quenching data points to a single high-affinity As(III) binding site that is associated with the fluorescence quenching. Triplet-state kinetic measurements performed on the perturbed tryptophan show large reductions in the lifetimes of the triplet sublevels, especially that of the T chi sublevel. As(III) binding to the enzyme at a site very close to the Trp225 residue induces an external heavy-atom effect, showing that the perturber atom is in van der Waals contact with the indole chromophore. In the case of the C223S mutant, a single tryptophan 0,0-band also is observed in the phosphorescence spectrum, but no change occurs upon addition of the As(III) reagent. Fluorescence titration of C223S with As(III) shows essentially no quenching of tryptophan fluorescence, in contrast with W183F. These results, along with previous triplet-state and biochemical studies on the wild-type enzyme [Tsao, D. H.H., & Maki, A. H. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 4565-4572], show that As(III) binds with high affinity to the Cys223 residue and that the Trp225 side chain is located close enough to that of Cys223 to produce a heavy-atom perturbation when As(III) is bound.  相似文献   

7.
J W Berger  J M Vanderkooi 《Biochemistry》1989,28(13):5501-5508
Room temperature phosphorescence techniques were used to study the structural and dynamic features of the tryptophan residues in bovine alpha-crystallin. Upon excitation at 290 nm, the characteristic signature of tryptophan phosphorescence was observed with an emission maximum at 442 +/- 2 nm. The phosphorescence intensity decay was biphasic with lifetimes of 5.4 ms (71%) and 42 ms (29%). Phosphorescence quenching measurements strongly suggest that each component corresponds to one class of tryptophans with the more buried residues having the longer emission lifetime. Three small-molecule quenchers were surveyed, and in order of increasing quenching efficiency: iodide less than nitrite less than acrylamide. A heavy-atom effect was observed in iodide solutions, and an upper limit of 5% was placed on the quantum yield of triplet formation in iodide-free solutions, while the phosphorescence quantum yield was estimated to be approximately 3.2 x 10(-4). The temperature dependence of the phosphorescence lifetime was measured between 5 and 40 degrees C. Arrhenius plots exhibited discontinuities at 26 and 29 degrees C for the short- and long-lived components, respectively, corresponding to abrupt transitions in segmental flexibility. Denaturation studies revealed conformational transitions between 1 and 2 M guanidine hydrochloride, and 4 and 6 M urea. Long-lived phosphorescence lifetimes of 3 and 7 ms were measured in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride and 8 M urea, respectively, suggesting that some structural features are preserved even at very high concentrations of denaturant. Our studies demonstrate the sensitivity of room temperature phosphorescence spectroscopy to the structure of alpha-crystallin, and the applicability of this technique for monitoring conformational changes in lens crystallin proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Fetler L  Tauc P  Hervé G  Cunin R  Brochon JC 《Biochemistry》2001,40(30):8773-8782
The homotropic and heterotropic interactions in Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase (EC 2.1.3.2) are accompanied by various structure modifications. The large quaternary structure change associated with the T to R transition, promoted by substrate binding, is accompanied by different local conformational changes. These tertiary structure modifications can be monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy, after introduction of a tryptophan fluorescence probe at the site of investigation. To relate unambiguously the fluorescence signals to structure changes in a particular region, both naturally occurring Trp residues in positions 209c and 284c of the catalytic chains were previously substituted with Phe residues. The regions of interest were the so-called 240's loop at position Tyr240c, which undergoes a large conformational change upon substrate binding, and the interface between the catalytic and regulatory chains in positions Asn153r and Phe145r supposed to play a role in the different regulatory processes. Each of these tryptophan residues presents a complex fluorescence decay with three to four independent lifetimes, suggesting that the holoenzyme exists in slightly different conformational states. The bisubstrate analogue N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate affects mostly the environment of tryptophans at position 240c and 145r, and the fluorescence signals were related to ligand binding and the quaternary structure transition, respectively. The binding of the nucleotide activator ATP slightly affects the distribution of the conformational substates as probed by tryptophan residues at position 240c and 145r, whereas the inhibitor CTP modifies the position of the C-terminal residues as reflected by the fluorescence properties of Trp153r. These results are discussed in correlation with earlier mutagenesis studies and mechanisms of the enzyme allosteric regulation.  相似文献   

9.
Single-tryptophan-containing mutants of low adenylation state Escherichia coli glutamine synthetase (wild type has two tryptophans at positions 57 and 158) have been constructed and studied by multifrequency phase/modulation fluorescence spectroscopy. The W57L mutant (retains tryptophan at residue 158) and the W158S mutant (retains tryptophan at residue 57) are both characterized by heterogeneous exponential decay kinetics. Global analysis indicates that for the Mn-bound form of the enzyme at pH 7.4 the fluorescence of both tryptophans is best described by a sum of three discrete expontials with recovered lifetimes of 4.77, 1.72, and 0.10 ns for Trp-57 and 5.04, 2.28, and 0.13 ns for Trp-158. The wild-type enzyme also exhibits decay kinetics described by a triple-exponential model with similar lifetime components. The individual tryptophans are distinguishable by the fractional intensities of the resolvable lifetimes. The wild-type and W158S enzymes are dominated by the 5-ns component which provides nearly 60% and 65%, respectively, of the fractional intensity at five wavelengths spanning the emission spectrum. In contrast, the W57L enzyme demonstrates a larger fraction of the 2-ns lifetime species (60%) and only 35% of the longer lifetime component. The substrate ATP induces a shift to approximately 90% of the 5-ns component for the wild-type and W158S enzymes, whereas the W57L protein is essentially unaffected by this ligand. Steady-state quenching studies with iodide indicate that addition of ATP results in a 3.0-3.5-fold decrease in the apparent Stern-Volmer quenching constants for the wild-type and W158S enzymes. Phase/modulation experiments at several iodide concentrations indicate that the median, 2 ns, lifetime component is selectively quenched compared to the 5-ns lifetime component. These results suggest a model where ATP binding results in a shift in the equilibrium distribution of microconformational states populated by Trp-57. ATP shifts this equilibrium nearly completely to the states exhibiting the long-lifetime component which, based on quenching studies, is less solvent-accessible than the conformational states associated with the other lifetime components.  相似文献   

10.
Part of the dimer and B/C domain interface of the Escherichia coli mannitol permease (EII(mtl)) has been identified by the generation of disulfide bridges in a single-cysteine EII(mtl), with only the activity linked Cys(384) in the B domain, and in a double-cysteine EII(mtl) with cysteines at positions 384 and 124 in the first cytoplasmic loop of the C domain. The disulfide bridges were formed in the enzyme in inside-out membrane vesicles and in the purified enzyme by oxidation with Cu(II)-(1,10-phenanthroline)(3), and they were visualized by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Discrimination between possible disulfide bridges in the dimeric double-cysteine EII(mtl) was done by partial digestion of the protein and the formation of heterodimers, in which the cysteines were located either on different subunits or on one subunit. The disulfide bridges that were identified are an intersubunit Cys(384)-Cys(384), an intersubunit Cys(124)-Cys(124), an intersubunit Cys(384)-Cys(124), and an intrasubunit Cys(384)-Cys(124). The disulfide bridges between the B and C domain were observed with purified enzyme and confirmed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry. Mannitol did not influence the formation of the disulfide between Cys(384) and Cys(124). The close proximity of the two cysteines 124 was further confirmed with a separate C domain by oxidation with Cu(II)-(1,10-phenanthroline)(3) or by reactions with dimaleimides of different length. The data in combination with other work show that the first cytoplasmic loop around residue 124 is located at the dimer interface and involved in the interaction between the B and C domain.  相似文献   

11.
The fluorescence and phosphorescence spectra of model indole compounds and of cod parvalbumin III, a protein containing a single tryptophan and no tyrosine, were examined in the time scale ranging from subnanoseconds to milliseconds at 25 degrees C in aqueous buffer. For both Ca- bound and Ca-free parvalbumin and for model indole compounds that contained a proton donor, a phosphorescent species emitting at 450 nm with a lifetime of approximately 20-40 ns could be identified. A longer-lived phosphorescence is also apparent; it has approximately the same absorption and emission spectrum as the short-lived triplet molecule. For Ca parvalbumin, the decay of the long-lived triplet tryptophan is roughly exponential with a lifetime of 4.7 ms at 25 degrees C whereas for N-acetyltryptophanamide in aqueous buffer the decay lifetime was 30 microseconds. In contrast, the lifetime of the long-lived tryptophan species is much shorter in the Ca-free protein compared with Ca parvalbumin, and the decay shows complex nonexponential kinetics over the entire time range from 100 ns to 1 ms. It is concluded that the photochemistry of tryptophan must take into account the existence of two excited triplet species and that there are quenching moieties within the protein matrix that decrease the phosphorescence yield in a dynamic manner for the Ca-depleted parvalbumin. In contrast, for Ca parvalbumin, the tryptophan site is rigid on the time scale of milliseconds.  相似文献   

12.
The Trp phosphorescence spectrum, intensity and decay kinetics of apo-aspartate aminotransferase, pyridoxamine-5P-aspartate-aminotransferase and pyridoxal-5P-aspartate aminotransferase were measured over a temperature range 160-273 K. The fine structure of the phosphorescence spectra in low-temperature glasses, with 0-0 vibrational bands centered at 408, 415 and 417 nm, for both apoenzyme and pyridoxamine-5P-enzyme reveals a marked heterogeneity of the chromophore environments. Only for the pyridoxal-5P form of the enzyme is the triplet emission strongly quenched and, in this case, the spectrum displays a unique 0-0 vibrational band centered at 415 nm. Concomitant to quenching, there is Trp-sensitized delayed fluorescence of the Schiff base, an indication that quenching of the excited triplet state is due, at least in part, to a process of triplet singlet energy transfer to the ketoenamine tautomer. All three forms of the enzyme are phosphorescent for temperatures up to 273 K. However, across the glass transition temperature the pyridoxal-5P enzyme shows a decrease in lifetime-normalized phosphorescence intensity, a thermal quenching that reduces even further the number of phosphorescing residues at ambient temperature. In fluid solution, the triplet decay is nonexponential and multiple lifetimes stress the heterogeneity in dynamical structure of the chromophores' sites. For the pyridoxal-5P enzyme, where only one or at most two residues are phosphorescent at 273 K, the nonexponential nature of the decay implies the presence of different conformers of the protein not interconverting in the millisecond time scale.  相似文献   

13.
S Ghosh  A Misra  A Ozarowski  C Stuart  A H Maki 《Biochemistry》2001,40(49):15024-15030
The phosphorescence and zero field optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) of the tryptophan (Trp) residues of alkaline phosphatase from Escherechia coli are examined. Each Trp is resolved optically and identified with the aid of the W220Y mutant and the terbium complex of the apoenzyme. Trp(109), known from earlier work to be the source of room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP), emits a highly resolved low-temperature phosphorescence (LTP) spectrum and has the narrowest ODMR bands observed thus far from any protein site, revealing a uniquely homogeneous local environment. The decay kinetics of Trp(109) at 1.2 K reveals that the major triplet population (70%) undergoes inefficient crystallike spin-lattice relaxation by direct interaction with lattice phonons, the remainder being relaxed efficiently by local disorder modes. The latter population is smaller than is typical for protein sites, suggesting an unusual degree of local rigidity and order consistent with the long-lived RTP. Trp(220) emits a broader LTP spectrum originating to the blue of Trp(109). It has typically broad ODMR bands consistent with local heterogeneity. The LTP of Trp(268) has an ill-defined origin blue shifted relative to Trp(220) and ODMR frequencies consistent with a greater degree of solvent exposure. Trp(268) has noticeable dispersion of its decay kinetics, consistent with quenching at the triplet level by a nearby disulfide residue.  相似文献   

14.
Phosphorescence and optically detected triplet state magnetic resonance (ODMR) spectroscopy studies of recA protein and its complexes with poly(5-HgU) and poly(dA-5BrdU) show that the two tryptophan residues are not involved in stacking interactions with the nucleotide bases of either single- or double-stranded polynucleotides. Solvent conditions which induce preferential binding to single-stranded ligands result in a shortening of the tyrosine phosphorescence lifetime, which is further reduced upon binding to poly(5-HgU). This suggests a change in the global conformation or self-aggregation state of the protein. Binding to poly(dA-5BrdU) induces small changes in the tryptophan zero field splittings of recA, but significant changes on those of 5BrdU, which are consistent with recA binding to the minor groove of the polynucleotide.  相似文献   

15.
This review summarizes the recent developments in identifying the activity-linked cysteine as one of the phosphorylation sites on the mannitol-specific EII of the E. coli phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent mannitol transport system. Two phosphorylation sites have been identified, one being the HPr/P-HPr exchange site, the other being the mannitol/mannitol-P exchange site. The activity-linked cysteine and the second phosphorylation site are located in the same 14 residue peptide. Phosphorylation of the second site and phosphoryl group transfer to mannitol do not occur as long as the activity-linked cysteine is oxidized or alkylated.A kinetic scheme has been developed which accounts for the relationships between the redox state, the phosphorylation state and the activity of the carrier. Kinetics of the individual reactions determine whether the enzyme cycles through an oxidized/reduced state during a cycle of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation.Abbreviations DTT Dithiothreitol - glc glucose - mtl mannitol - mtl-P mannitol Phosphate - frc fructose - bgl -glucoside - nag N-acetylglucosamine - PTS Phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent Phosphotransferase System - PEP Phosphoenolpyruvate - P-enolpyruvate Phosphoenolpyruvate  相似文献   

16.
Purified mannitol-specific enzyme II (EII) from Escherichia coli was reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles with the aid of a detergent-dialysis procedure followed by a freeze-thaw sonication step. The orientation of EII in the proteoliposomes was random. The cytoplasmic moiety of the inverted EII could be removed with trypsin without effecting the integrity of the liposomal membrane. This enabled us to study the two different EII orientations independently. The population of inverted EII molecules was monitored by measuring active extrusion of mannitol after the addition of phosphoenolpyruvate, EI, and histidine-containing phosphocarrier protein (HPr) at the outside of the vesicles. The population of correctly oriented EII molecules was monitored by measuring active uptake of mannitol with internal phosphoenolpyruvate, EI, and HPr. A low rate of facilitated diffusion of mannitol via the unphosphorylated carrier could be measured. On the other hand, a high phosphorylation activity without translocation was observed at the outside of the liposomes. The kinetics of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent transport reaction and the nonvectorial phosphorylation reaction were compared. Transport of mannitol into the liposomes via the correctly oriented EII molecules occurred with a high affinity (Km, lower than 10 microM) and with a relatively low Vmax. Phosphorylation at the outside of the liposomes catalyzed by the inverted EII molecules occurred with a low affinity (Km of about 66 microM), while the maximal velocity was about 10 times faster than the transport reaction. The latter observation is kinetic proof for the lack of strict coupling between transport and phosphorylation in these enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
Fluorescence and optical detection of triplet state magnetic resonance (ODMR) spectroscopy have been employed to study the complexes formed between single-stranded polynucleotides and Escherichia coli ssb gene products (SSB) in which tryptophans 40, 54, and 88 are selectively, one residue at a time, replaced by phenylalanine using site-specific oligonucleotide mutagenesis. Fluorescence titrations and ODMR results indicate that tryptophans 40 and 54 are the only tryptophan residues in E. coli single-stranded DNA binding protein that are involved in stabilizing the protein-nucleic acid complexes via stacking interactions. Wavelength-selected ODMR measurements on E. coli SSB reveal the presence of two spectrally distinct tryptophan sites (Khamis, M. I., Casas-Finet, J. R., and Maki, A. H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 1725-1733). Our present results indicate that tryptophan 54 belongs to the blue-shifted site, while tryptophan 40 belongs to the red-shifted site of the protein.  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.
Synapsin I is a major nerve terminal-specific phosphoprotein. It consists of a hydrophobic head region containing one phosphorylation site for either cAMP-dependent protein kinase or Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase I and of a basic and elongated tail region containing two phosphorylation sites for Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II. The steady-state emission spectrum of synapsin I was centered at 330 nm and was markedly red shifted upon denaturation, as expected for tryptophan residues segregated from the external aqueous environment in native conditions. Quenching studies showed a low accessibility of synapsin I tryptophans at low ionic strength which was further decreased by exposure to 200 mM NaCl but not significantly affected by phosphorylation. The intrinsic fluorescence of synapsin I was resolved into three major decay components with lifetimes of about 0.2, 3, and 7 ns. Upon phosphorylation of synapsin I on the tail sites, the spectra associated with the intermediate and long lifetimes were shifted to the red region, while the spectrum associated with the short lifetime was shifted to the blue region, in the absence of significant changes of the lifetimes. Phosphorylation of synapsin I on the head site was less effective. The anisotropy decay of synapsin I labeled with the long-living chromophore pyrene on Cys-223 was also analyzed. A shorter rotational correlation time was found for the tail phosphorylated form (corresponding to a Stokes radius of 41-42 A) than for the dephosphorylated or for the head phosphorylated form (corresponding to a Stokes radius of 60-63 A). The data suggest that phosphorylation of the tail sites induces changes in the conformation and hydrodynamic properties of synapsin I which may play a role in the regulation of the molecular interactions of synapsin I within the nerve terminal.  相似文献   

20.
Misra A  Ozarowski A  Casas-Finet JR  Maki AH 《Biochemistry》2000,39(45):13772-13780
Complexes of four peptides [KWGK, KGWK, K(6MeW)GK, KG(6MeW)K] with the nucleic acids [poly(A), poly(C), poly(U), poly(I), and rG(8)] have been investigated by phosphorescence and optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) spectroscopy. The intrinsic spectroscopic probes used in these studies are tryptophan (W) and 6-methyltryptophan (6MeW). Binding to the nucleic acids results in a red-shift of the phosphorescence 0,0-band (delta E(0,0)) of the aromatic residue as well as a reduction of its zero-field splitting parameter (delta D). Results are compared with earlier studies of the HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein, NCp7, that contains a single tryptophan residue (Trp37) within a retroviral zinc finger sequence. Binding of poly(A) or poly(U) to the tetrapeptides induces larger delta E(0,0) and delta D than when bound to NCp7, indicating stronger stacking interactions. Poly(I), on the other hand, produces larger shifts in Trp37 of NCp7. Binding of rG(8) produces sequence-dependent effects in the peptides. When bound to NCp7, but in contrast with tetrapeptide binding, nucleic acids produce large changes in triplet state kinetics consistent with enhanced spin-orbit coupling. These results are discussed in terms of three limiting types of tryptophan-base interaction: intercalation, aromatic stacking, and edge-on interaction. These should have differing effects on the properties of the triplet state.  相似文献   

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