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1.
We have monitored the membrane-bound channel and nonchannel conformations of gramicidin utilizing red-edge excitation shift (REES), and related fluorescence parameters. In particular, we have used fluorescence lifetime, polarization, quenching, chemical modification, and membrane penetration depth analysis in addition to REES measurements to distinguish these two conformations. Our results show that REES of gramicidin tryptophans can be effectively used to distinguish conformations of membrane-bound gramicidin. The interfacially localized tryptophans in the channel conformation display REES of 7 nm whereas the tryptophans in the nonchannel conformation exhibit REES of 2 nm which highlights the difference in their average environments in terms of localization in the membrane. This is supported by tryptophan penetration depth measurements using the parallax method and fluorescence lifetime and polarization measurements. Further differences in the average tryptophan microenvironments in the two conformations are brought out by fluorescence quenching experiments using acrylamide and chemical modification of the tryptophans by N-bromosuccinimide. In summary, we report novel fluorescence-based approaches to monitor conformations of this important ion channel peptide. Our results offer vital information on the organization and dynamics of the functionally important tryptophan residues in gramicidin.  相似文献   

2.
We report tryptophan fluorescence measurements of emission intensity, iodide quenching, and anisotropy that describe the environment and dynamics at X and Y sites in stable collagen-like peptides of sequence (Gly-X-Y)(n). About 90% of tryptophans at both sites have similar solvent exposed fluorescence properties and a lifetime of 8.5-9 ns. Analysis of anisotropy decays using an associative model indicates that these long lifetime populations undergo rapid depolarizing motion with a 0.5 ns correlation time; however, the extent of fast motion at the Y site is considerably less than the essentially unrestricted motion at the X site. About 10% of tryptophans at both sites have a shorter ( approximately 3 ns) lifetime indicating proximity to a protein quenching group; these minor populations are immobile on the peptide surface, depolarizing only by overall trimer rotation. Iodide quenching indicates that tryptophans at the X site are more accessible to solvent. Side chains at X sites are more solvent accessible and considerably more mobile than residues at Y sites and can more readily fluctuate among alternate intermolecular interactions in collagen fibrils. This fluorescence analysis of collagen-like peptides lays a foundation for studies on the structure, dynamics, and function of collagen and of triple-helical junctions in gelatin gels.  相似文献   

3.
Fluorescence quenching studies on the PII isoenzyme of yeast hexokinase have been performed using charged as well as polar uncharged quenchers. In both 'open' (i.e. in the absence of glucose) and 'closed' (i.e. in the presence of glucose) forms of the enzyme, bimolecular quenching rate constant (kq) for acrylamide is significantly larger than that of KI, indicating that all the tryptophans are not fully exposed to the solvent. Overall accessibility of tryptophans towards KI was greater in the presence of glucose than in the absence of glucose. At high ionic strength, the value of bimolecular quenching rate constant (kq) for KI did not change suggesting that the average environment of the accessible tryptophan residue(s) is almost neutral. Quenching by KI is dynamic in nature. Accessibility of tryptophans towards acrylamide at concentration > or = 0.2 M was more in the 'open' form of the enzyme than that observed in the 'closed' form whereas at concentration < or = 0.2 M no significant difference in the extent of quenching was observed. It is reasonable to conclude that glucose induced conformational change leads some tryptophan residue(s) to be more exposed and at the same time some tryptophan residue(s) in the hydrophobic region become more buried. Dimeric and monomeric forms of the enzyme behave similarly towards the quenching by acrylamide. In the unfolded state, the accessibility of tryptophans was considerably higher for both the quenchers. Temperature dependent study and the fluorescence lifetime data indicate that the mechanism of quenching by acrylamide is primarily dynamic in nature.  相似文献   

4.
The fluorescence of a membrane-bound tryptophan derivative (tryptophan octyl ester, TOE) has been examined as a model for tryptophan fluorescence from proteins in membrane environments. The depth-dependent fluorescence quenching of TOE by brominated lipids was found to proceed via a dynamic mechanism with vertical fluctuations playing a central role in the process. The activation energy for the quenching was estimated to be 1.3 kcal/mole. The data were analyzed using the distribution analysis (DA) method, which extends the conventional parallax method to account more realistically for the transbilayer distributions of both probe and quencher and for possible variations in the probe's accessibility. DA provides a better fit than the parallax method to data collected with TOE in membranes formed of lipids brominated at either the 4,5, the 6,7, the 9,10, or the 11,12 positions of the sn-2 acyl chain. DA yields information on the fluorophore's most probable depth in the membrane, its conformational heterogeneity, and its accessibility to the lipid phase. Previously reported data on cytochrome b5 and melittin were reanalyzed together with data obtained with TOE. This new analysis demonstrates conformational heterogeneity in melittin and provides estimates of the freedom of motion and exposure to the lipid phase of membrane-embedded tryptophans of cytochrome b5.  相似文献   

5.
Fluorescence of human liver alanine aminopeptidase has been attributed to tryptophan fluorescence. The fluorescence maximum is at 330 nm, 20 nm lower than that for free tryptophan, suggesting that most of the enzyme tryptophans are in a nonpolar environment and are shielded from solvent. Quenching of enzyme fluorescence by iodide, pyridine, and N-methyl nicotinamide also demonstrates that enzyme tryptophan residues are largely buried and inaccessible to solvent. Those accessible are in negatively charged environments. 8-(1'-dimethylaminonaphthalene-5'-sulfonylamido-octanoic acid (8-DNS-octanoic acid) and epsilon-DNS-L-Lys inhibit aminopeptidase. One molecule of inhibitor when bound to the enzyme quenched 57% and 63% of enzyme fluorescence, respectively. Such efficient quenching may indicate a degree of segregation of tryptophan toward the active center.  相似文献   

6.
The conformation of native pertussis toxin has been investigated by secondary structure prediction and by circular dichroism, fluorescence and second-derivative ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy. The far-ultraviolet circular dichroic spectrum is characteristic of a protein of high beta-sheet and low alpha-helix content. This is also shown by an analysis of the circular dichroic spectrum with the Contin programme which indicates that the toxin possesses 53% beta-sheet, 10% alpha-helix and 37% beta-turn/loop secondary structure. Second-derivative ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy suggests that 34 tyrosine residues are solvent-exposed and quenching of tryptophan fluorescence emission has shown that 4 tryptophan residues are accessible to iodide ions. One of these tryptophans appears to be in close proximity to a positively charged side-chain, since only 3 tryptophans are accessible to caesium ion fluorescence quenching. When excited at 280 nm, the emission spectrum contains a significant contribution from tyrosine fluorescence, which may be a consequence of the high proportion (55%) of surface-exposed tyrosines. No changes in the circular dichroic spectra of the toxin were found in the presence of the substrate NAD. However, NAD did quench both tyrosine and tryptophan fluorescence emission but did not change the shape of the emission spectrum, or the accessibility of the tryptophans to either the ionic fluorescence quenchers or the neutral quencher acrylamide.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Fluorescence quenching is used to gain information on the exposure of tryptophan residues to lipid in membrane-bound proteins and peptides. A protocol is developed to calculate this exposure, based on a comparison of quenching efficiency and of a fluorescence lifetime (or quantum yield) measured for a protein and for a model tryptophan-containing compound. Various methods of analysis of depth-dependent quenching are compared and three universal measures of quenching profile are derived. One of the measures, related to the area under profile, is used to estimate quenching efficiency. The method is applied to single tryptophan mutants of a membrane-anchoring nonpolar peptide of cytochrome b(5) and of an outer membrane protein A. Analysis of quenching of the cytochrome's nonpolar peptide by a set of four brominated lipids reveals a temperature-controlled reversible conformational change, resulting in increased exposure of tryptophan to lipid and delocalization of its transverse position. Kinetic quenching profiles and fluorescence binding kinetics reported by Kleinschmidt et al. (Biochemistry (1999) 38, 5006-5016) were analyzed to extract information on the relative exposure of tryptophan residues during folding of an outer membrane protein A. Trp-102, which translocates across the bilayer, was found to be noticeably shielded from the lipid environment throughout the folding event compared to Trp-7, which remains on the cis side. The approach described here provides a new tool for studies of low-resolution structure and conformational transitions in membrane proteins and peptides.  相似文献   

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

10.
The use of steady-state fluorescence quenching methods is reported as a probe of the accessibility of the single fluorescent tryptophan residue of bovine growth hormone (bGH, bovine somatotropin, bSt) in four solution-state conformations. Different bGH conformations were prepared by using previous knowledge of the multi-state nature of the equilibrium unfolding pathway for bGH: alterations in denaturant and protein concentration yielded different bGH conformations (native, monomeric intermediate, associated intermediate and unfolded). Because the intramolecular fluorescence quenching which occurs in the native state is reduced when the protein unfolds to any of the other conformations, steady-state fluorescence intensity measurements can be used to monitor bGH unfolding as well as the formation of the associated intermediate. These steady-state intensity changes have been confirmed with fluorescence lifetime measurements for the different conformational states of bGH. Fluorescence quenching results were obtained using the quenchers iodide (ionic), acrylamide (polar) and trichloroethanol (non-polar). Analysis of the results for native-state bGH reveals that the tryptophan environment is slightly non-polar (in agreement with the emission maximum of 335 nm) and the tryptophan is more exposed to acrylamide than most native-state tryptophan residues which have been studied. The tryptophan is most accessible to all quenchers in the unfolded state, because no steric restrictions inhibit quencher interaction with the tryptophan residue. The iodide quenching results indicate that the associated intermediate tryptophan is not accessible to iodide, probably due to negative charges inhibiting iodide penetration. The associated intermediate tryptophan is less accessible to all three quenchers than the monomeric intermediate tryptophan, due to tight packing of molecules in the associated intermediate state.  相似文献   

11.
Liu R  Siemiarczuk A  Sharom FJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(48):14927-14938
P-glycoprotein is a member of the ATP binding cassette family of membrane proteins, and acts as an ATP-driven efflux pump for a diverse group of hydrophobic drugs, natural products, and peptides. The side chains of aromatic amino acids have been proposed to play an important role in recognition and binding of substrates by P-glycoprotein. Steady-state and lifetime fluorescence techniques were used to probe the environment of the 11 tryptophan residues within purified functional P-glycoprotein, and their response to binding of nucleotides and substrates. The emission spectrum of P-glycoprotein indicated that these residues are present in a relatively nonpolar environment, and time-resolved experiments showed the existence of at least two lifetimes. Quenching studies with acrylamide and iodide indicated that those tryptophan residues predominantly contributing to fluorescence emission are buried within the protein structure. Only small differences in Stern-Volmer quenching constants were noted on binding of nucleotides and drugs, arguing against large changes in tryptophan accessibility following substrate binding. P-glycoprotein fluorescence was highly quenched on binding of fluorescent nucleotides, and moderately quenched by ATP, ADP, and AMP-PNP, suggesting that the site for nucleotide binding is located relatively close to tryptophan residues. Drugs, modulators, hydrophobic peptides, and nucleotides quenched the fluorescence of P-glycoprotein in a saturable fashion, allowing estimation of dissociation constants. Many compounds exhibited biphasic quenching, suggesting the existence of multiple drug binding sites. The quenching observed for many substrates was attributable largely to resonance energy transfer, indicating that these compounds may be located close to tryptophan residues within, or adjacent to, the membrane-bound domains. Thus, the regions of P-glycoprotein involved in nucleotide and drug binding appear to be packed together compactly, which would facilitate coupling of ATP hydrolysis to drug transport.  相似文献   

12.
Human thymus adenosine deaminase was isolated by using a monoclonal antibody affinity column. The highly purified enzyme produced by this rapid, efficient procedure had a molecular weight of 44,000. Quenching of the intrinsic protein fluorescence by small molecules was used to probe the accessibility of tryptophan residues in the enzyme and enzyme-inhibitor complexes. The fluorescence emission spectrum of human adenosine deaminase at 295-nm excitation had a maximum at about 335 nm and a quantum yield of 0.03. Addition of polar fluorescence quenchers, iodide and acrylamide, shifted the peak to the blue, and the hydrophobic quencher trichloroethanol shifted the peak to the red, indicating that the emission spectrum is heterogeneous. The fluorescence quenching parameters obtained for these quenchers reveal that the tryptophan environments in the protein are relatively hydrophobic. Binding of both ground-state and transition-state analogue inhibitors caused decreases in the fluorescence intensity of the enzyme, suggesting that one or more tryptophans may be near the active site. The kinetics of the fluorescence decrease were consistent with a slow conformational alteration in the transition-state inhibitor complexes. Fluorescence quenching experiments using polar and nonpolar quenchers were also carried out for the enzyme-inhibitor complexes. The quenching parameters for all enzyme-inhibitor complexes differed from those for the uncomplexed enzyme, suggesting that inhibitor binding causes changes in the conformation of adenosine deaminase. For comparison, parallel quenching studies were performed for calf adenosine deaminase in the absence and presence of inhibitors. While significant structural differences between adenosine deaminase from the two sources were evident, our data indicate that both enzymes undergo conformational changes on binding ground-state and transition-state inhibitors.  相似文献   

13.
Reversible unfolding of rat testis fructose 6-phosphate,2-kinase:fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase in guanidine hydrochloride was monitored by following enzyme activities as well as by fluorescence methodologies (intensity, emission maximum, polarization, and quenching), using both intrinsic (tryptophan) and extrinsic (5((2-(iodoacetyl)amino) ethyl)naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid) probes. The unfolding reaction is described minimally as a 4-state transition from folded dimer-->partially unfolded dimer-->monomer-->unfolded monomer. The partially unfolded dimer had a high phosphatase/kinase ratio due to preferential unfolding of the kinase domain. The renaturation reaction proceeded by very rapid conversion (less than 1 s) of unfolded monomer to dimer, devoid of any enzyme activity, followed by slow (over 60 min) formation of the active enzyme. The recovery rates of the kinase and the phosphatase were similar. Thus, the refolding appeared to be a reversal of the unfolding pathway involving different forms of the transient dimeric intermediates. Fluorescence quenching studies using iodide and acrylamide showed that the tryptophans, including Trp-15 in the N-terminal peptide, were only slightly accessible to iodide but were much more accessible to acrylamide. Fructose 6-phosphate, but not ATP or fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, diminished the iodide quenching, but all these ligands inhibited the acrylamide quenching by 25%. These results suggested that the N-terminal peptide (containing a tryptophan) was not exposed on the protein surface and may play an important role in shielding other tryptophans from solvent.  相似文献   

14.
Mercuric ion interacts with indoles, including tryptophan, to produce complexes whose absorption spectra are broader, less structured, and red-shifted as compared with those of the parent compound. Fluorescence and phosphorescence are totally quenched. In a survey of the effect of transition metal ions on tryptophan fluorescence, the strong quenching by Hg2+ was unique among the uncolored ions. Mercuric nitrate quenched the fluorescence of practically every protein tested, but the sensitivity to quenching varied with the protein. Ovalbumin was the most sensitive to quenching by Hg2+, over 70% of the intrinsic fluorescence being quenched by 2 moles of mercuric ion. Difference absorption spectra show that sulfhydryl groups are attacked by these reagents and Hg2+ is, in addition, perturbing the environment near some tryptophans. In contrast to Hg2+, Zn2+ had negligible effect on protein fluorescence. The emission spectra of proteins which were partly quenched by mercuric ion showed shifts in their maxima to higher or lower wavelengths. This suggests that mercuric ion quenched certain tryptophans more than others, and supports the idea that protein fluorescence is heterogeneous and arises from tryptophans in different microenvironments.  相似文献   

15.
Peptide-induced conformational changes in five isofunctional mutants of calmodulin (CaM), each bearing a single tryptophan residue either at the seventh position of each of the four calcium-binding loops (i.e., amino acids 26, 62, 99, and 135) or in the central helix (amino acid 81) were studied by using fluorescence spectroscopy. The peptides RS20F and RS20CK correspond to CaM-binding amino acid sequence segments of either nonmuscle myosin light chain kinase (nmMLCK) or calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMPK-II), respectively. Both steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence data were collected from the various peptide-CaM complexes. Steady-state fluorescence intensity measurements indicated that, in the presence of an excess of calcium, both peptides bind to the calmodulin mutants with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The tryptophans located in loops I and IV exhibited red-shifted emission maxima (356 nm), high quantum yields (0.3), and long average lifetimes (6 ns). They responded in a similar manner to peptide binding, by only slight changes in their fluorescence features. In contrast, the fluorescence intensity of the tryptophans in loops II and III decreased markedly, and their fluorescence spectrum was blue-shifted upon peptide binding. Analysis of the tryptophan fluorescence decay of the last mentioned calmodulins supports a model in which the equilibrium between two (Trp-99) or three (Trp-62) states of these tryptophan residues, each characterized by a different lifetime, was altered toward the blue-shifted short lifetime component upon peptide binding. Taken together, these data provide new evidence that both lobes of calmodulin are involved in peptide binding. Both peptides induced similar changes in the fluorescence properties of the tryptophan residues located in the calcium-binding loops, with the exception of calmodulin with Trp-135. For this last mentioned calmodulin, slight differences were observed. Tryptophan in the central helix responded differently to RS20F and RS20CK binding. RS20F binding induced a red-shift in the emission maximum of Trp-81 while RS20CK induced a blue-shift. The quenching rate of Trp-81 by iodide was slightly reduced upon RS20CK binding, while RS20F induced a 2-fold increase. These results provide evidence that the environment of Trp-81 is different in each case and are, therefore, consistent with the hypothesis that the central helix can play a differential role in the recognition of, or response to, CaM-binding structures.  相似文献   

16.
Lipophorin was isolated from larvae of a root weevil, Diaprepes abbreviatus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), using density gradient ultracentrifugation. D. abbreviatus lipophorin contained two apoproteins, apolipophorin-I (Mr = 226,000) and apolipophorin-II (Mr = 72,100) and had a density of 1.08. Relative to other larval lipophorins, D. abbreviatus lipophorin contained little cysteine (determined as cysteic acid) and methionine. Fluorescence spectroscopy of intrinsic tyrosine and tryptophan residues excited at 290 nm revealed a single broad emission peak at 330 nm. Upon denaturing and delipidating lipophorin in guanidine HCl, this peak resolved into two peaks with maxima at 305 and 350 nm. Excitation spectra suggested that the two peaks were due to tyrosine and tryptophan, respectively. Fluorescence quenching agents, iodide and acrylamide, were used to determine accessibility of tyrosine and tryptophan residues to the aqueous environment. Iodide, a polar quenching agent, did not quench fluorescent emission from native lipophorin; quenching by iodide increased to moderate levels when lipophorin was denatured in guanidine HCl. Acrylamide quenched the fluorescence of native lipophorin moderately and very efficiently quenched fluorescence of denatured lipophorin. No difference was observed between fluorescence quenching of denatured vs. denatured and delipidated lipophorin by either iodide or acrylamide.  相似文献   

17.
The binding of saccharides to Abrus precatorius agglutinin (APA) was analyzed by fluorescence spectroscopy. Upon binding of specific saccharides, the fluorescence emission maximum of APA (338 nm) shifted to shorter wavelength by 5 nm, owing to the change in the environment of tryptophan. By analyzing the change in the fluorescence intensity at 338 nm as a function of concentration of saccharides, the association constants for binding of saccharides to APA were determined. The results suggest that in the saccharide binding site on each B-chain of APA, there may be a site which interacts with the saccharide residue linked to galactopyranoside at the non-reducing end, in addition to the site which recognizes the galactopyranosyl residue. Fluorescence quenching data indicate that 8 out of 24 tryptophans in APA are located at or near the surface of the protein molecule and are available for quenching with both KI and acrylamide, and 10 tryptophans are involved in the environment to which acrylamide has access but KI does not. Binding of lactose to APA reduced by 4 the number of tryptophan residues accessible to quenchers. Based on the results, it is suggested that the tryptophan residues at the saccharide binding site on each B-chain of APA are present on the surface of the APA molecule, and they are shielded from quenching by KI and acrylamide upon binding with specific saccharides.  相似文献   

18.
Long-lived tryptophan fluorescence in phosphoglycerate mutase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
J A Schauerte  A Gafni 《Biochemistry》1989,28(9):3948-3954
Phosphoglycerate mutase (PGM; EC 2.7.5.3) isolated from rat and rabbit muscle has been shown to possess an unusually long-lived fluorescence component when excited by ultraviolet light below 310 nm. On the basis of spectral and physical measurements, this 16.4 (+/- 0.2) ns fluorescence lifetime at room temperature is assigned to a tryptophan residue in an unusual environment. The emission profile of this long-lived tryptophan is red shifted from the other tryptophans of PGM by approximately 25 nm. PGM has been crystallized and sequenced from yeast where it has been shown to be a tetramer with 29K subunits. However, we have not been able to detect the existence of an unusually long-lived fluorescence component in the yeast isomer. The long fluorescence lifetime is lost upon denaturation of rabbit PGM and is partially restored upon introduction of the protein to a nondenaturing environment, suggesting the long lifetime is not the result of a covalent modification. The PGM molecule was studied by a number of techniques including time-resolved tryptophan fluorescence, quenching studies of tryptophan fluorescence, and enzyme activity studies. The long-lived fluorescence has been shown to be statistically quenched by Br-, I-, and Cu2+ in the submillimolar region while the acrylamide quenching shows the tryptophan is marginally accessible to solvent. Characterization of the long-lived fluorescence and its possible sources are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The intestinal fatty acid binding protein contains two tryptophan residues (Trp6 and Trp82) both of which have been shown by X-ray and NMR methods to be buried in hydrophobic clusters. By using a combination of steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence experiments, we have deconvoluted the lifetime weighted contribution of each of the tryptophans to the steady-state fluorescence quantum yield. While Trp82 has been implicated in an intermediate that appears at relatively high denaturant concentrations, the variation of the lifetime weighted contribution of Trp6 with urea or guanidium hydrochloride shows formation of an intermediate state at low concentrations of the denaturant before the actual unfolding starts. Trp82 did not show similar behavior. Fluorescence quenching experiments by acrylamide show that while Trp6 in the native protein is less solvent-exposed, its accessibility is increased significantly at low urea concentration indicating that the early intermediate state is partially unfolded. Time-resolved anisotropy experiments indicate that the volume of the partially unfolded intermediates is larger than the native protein and lead to the speculation that the last step of the protein folding might be the removal of solvent molecules from the protein.  相似文献   

20.
Mitochondrial F1 from the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, in contrast to the mammalian enzyme, exhibits a characteristic intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence with a maximal excitation at 291 nm and a maximal emission at 332 nm. Low values of Stern-Volmer quenching constants, 4.0 M-1 or 1.8 M-1, respectively, in the presence of either acrylamide or iodide, indicate that tryptophans are mainly buried inside the native enzyme. Upon subunit dissociation and unfolding by 6 M guanidine hydrochloride (Gdn.HCl), the maximal emission is shifted to 354 nm, a value very similar to that obtained with N-acetyltryptophanamide, a solute-tryptophan model compound. The tryptophan content of each isolated subunit has been estimated by fluorescence titration in the presence of Gdn.HCl with free tryptophan as a standard. Two tryptophans and one tryptophan are found respectively in the alpha and epsilon subunits, whereas none is detected in the beta, gamma, and delta subunits. These subunit contents are consistent with the total of seven tryptophans estimated for native F1 with alpha 3 beta 3 gamma 1 delta 1 epsilon 1 stoichiometry. The maximal emission of the isolated epsilon subunit is markedly blue-shifted to 310-312 nm by interaction with the isolated delta subunit, which suggests that the epsilon subunit tryptophan might be a very minor contributor to the native F1 fluorescence measured at 332 nm. This fluorescence is very sensitive to phosphate, which produces a marked blue shift indicative of tryptophans in a more hydrophobic environment. On the other hand, ADP and ATP quench the maximal emission at 332 nm, lower tryptophan accessibility to acrylamide, and reveal tryptophan heterogeneity.  相似文献   

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