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1.
The intrinsic fluorescence properties of elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) in its complexes with GDP and elongation factor Ts (EF-Ts) have been investigated. The emission spectra for both complexes are dominated by the tyrosine contribution upon excitation at 280 nm whereas excitation at 300 nm leads to exclusive emission from the single tryptophan residue (Trp-184) of EF-Tu. The fluorescence lifetime of this tryptophan residue in both complexes was investigated by using a multifrequency phase fluorometer which achieves a broad range of modulation frequencies utilizing the harmonic content of a mode-locked laser. These results indicated a heterogeneous emission with major components near 4.8 ns for both complexes. Quenching experiments on both complexes indicated limited accessibility of the tryptophan residue to acrylamide and virtually no accessibility to iodide ion. The quenching patterns exhibited by EF-Tu-GDP and EF-Tu X EF-Ts were, however, different; both quenchers were more efficient at quenching the emission from the EF-Tu x EF-Ts complex. Steady-state and dynamic polarization measurements revealed limited local mobility for the tryptophan in the EF-Tu x GDP complex whereas formation of the EF-Tu x EF-Ts complex led to a dramatic increase in this local mobility.  相似文献   

2.
Aurodox is a member of the family of kirromycin antibiotics, which inhibit protein biosynthesis by binding to elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). We have determined the crystal structure of the 1:1:1 complex of Thermus thermophilus EF-Tu with GDP and aurodox to 2.0-A resolution. During its catalytic cycle, EF-Tu adopts two strikingly different conformations depending on the nucleotide bound: the GDP form and the GTP form. In the present structure, a GTP complex-like conformation of EF-Tu is observed, although GDP is bound to the nucleotide-binding site. This is consistent with previous proposals that aurodox fixes EF-Tu on the ribosome by locking it in its GTP form. Binding of EF-Tu.GDP to aminoacyl-tRNA and mutually exclusive binding of kirromycin and elongation factor Ts to EF-Tu can be explained on the basis of the structure. For many previously observed mutations that provide resistance to kirromycin, it can now be understood how they prevent interaction with the antibiotic. An unexpected feature of the structure is the reorientation of the His-85 side chain toward the nucleotide-binding site. We propose that this residue stabilizes the transition state of GTP hydrolysis, explaining the acceleration of the reaction by kirromycin-type antibiotics.  相似文献   

3.
The fluorescence decay kinetics at different ranges of the emission spectrum is reported for 17 proteins. Out of eight proteins containing a single tryptophan residue per molecule, seven proteins display multiexponential decay kinetics, suggesting that variability in protein structure may exist for most proteins. Tryptophan residues whose fluorescence spectrum is red shifted may have lifetimes longer than 7 ns. Such long lifetimes have not been detected in any of the denatured proteins studied, indicating that in native proteins the tryptophans having a red-shifted spectrum are affected by the tertiary structure of the protein. The fluorescence decay kinetics of ten denatured proteins studied obey multiexponential decay functions. It is therefore concluded that the tryptophan residues in denatured proteins can be grouped in two classes. The first characterized by a relatively long lifetime of about 4 ns and the second has a short lifetime of about 1.5 ns. The emission spectrum of the group which is characterized by the longer lifetime is red shifted relative to the emission spectrum of the group characterized by the shorter lifetime. A comparison of the decay data with the quantum yield of the proteins raises the possibility that a subgroup of the tryptophan residues is fully quenched. It is noteworthy that despite this heterogeneity in the environment of tryptophan residues in each denatured protein, almost the same decay kinetics has been obtained for all the denatured proteins studied in spite of the vastly different primary structures. It is therefore concluded that each tryptophan residue interacts in a more-or-less random manner with other groups on the polypeptide chain, and that on the average the different tryptophan residues in denatured proteins have a similar type of environment.  相似文献   

4.
Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements of tryptophan residues were carried out for 44 proteins. Internal rotational motion with a sub-nanosecond correlation time (0.9 +/- 0.6 ns at 10 degrees C) was seen in a large number of proteins, though its amplitude varied from protein to protein. It was found that tryptophan residues which were almost fixed within a protein had either a long (greater than 4 ns) or short (less than 2 ns) fluorescence lifetime, whereas a residue undergoing a large internal motion had an intermediate lifetime (1.5-3 ns). It is suggested that the emission kinetics of a tryptophan residue is coupled with its internal motion. In particular, an immobile tryptophan residue emitting at long wavelength was characterized by a long lifetime (greater than 4 ns). It appears that a tryptophan residue fixed in a polar region has little chance of being quenched by neighboring groups.  相似文献   

5.
The fluorescence lifetime of the single tryptophan in whiting parvalbumin has been measured by time-correlated single-photon counting. In the presence of saturating calcium, greater than 2 mol/mol of protein, the decay of fluorescence is accurately single exponential with a lifetime of 4.6 ns (0.1 M KCl, 20 mM borate, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 20 degrees C, pH 9). Upon complete removal of calcium from parvalbumin with ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid the emission decay becomes biphasic, and a second more rapid decay process with a lifetime of 1.3 ns comprising approximately 18% of the fluorescence emission at 350 nm is observed. The fluorescence emission of the calcium-saturated form is not measurably quenched by iodide. In contrast, upon complete removal of calcium, the fluorescence is completely quenchable as shown by extrapolation of the data to infinite iodide concentration. These results indicate that there is a large increase in the accessibility of the tryptophan residue in the protein to solvent upon removal of calcium. Stern-Volmer plots of the quenching data are nonlinear and indicate that there is more than one quenchable conformation of the calcium-free protein. The lifetime and quenching results are consistent with the presence of significant concentrations of only two stoichiometric species, apoparvalbumin and parvalbumin--Ca2, at partial occupancy of the calcium binding sites.  相似文献   

6.
The tryptophyl fluorescence emission of yeast 3-phosphoglycerate kinase decreases from pH 3.9 to pH 7.2 following a normal titration curve with an apparent pK of 4.7. The fluorescence decays have been determined at both extreme pH by photocounting pulse fluorimetry and have been found to vary with the emission wavelength. A quantitative analysis of these results according to a previously described method allows to determine the emission characteristics of the two tryptophan residues present in the protein molecule. At pH 3.9, one of the tryptophan residues is responsible for only 13% of the total fluorescence emission. This first residue has a lifetime τ1= 0.6 ns and a maximum fluorescence wavelength λ2max = 332 nm. The second tryptophan residue exhibits two lifetimes τ21= 3.1 ns and τ22= 7.0 ns (λ2max= 338 nm). In agreement with the attribution of τ21and τ32 to the same tryptophan residue, the ratio β = C21/C22 of the normalized amplitudes is constant along the fluorescence emission spectrum. At pH 7.2, the two tryptophan residues contribute almost equally tc the protein fluorescence. The decay time of tryptophan 1 is 0.4 ns. The other emission parameters are the same as those determined at pH 3.9. We conclude that the fluorescence quenching in the range pH 3.9 to pH 8.0 comes essentially from the formation of a non emitting internal ground state complex between the tryptophan having the longest decay times and a neighbouring protein chemical group. The intrinsic pK of this group and the equilibrium constant of the irternal complex can be estimated. The quenching group is thought to be a carboxylate anion. Excitation transfers between the two tryptophyl residues of the protein molecule appear to have a small efficiency.  相似文献   

7.
Recent characterization of spinach phosphoribulokinase has revealed that the homodimeric molecule contains only two tryptophans per 44-kDa subunit. We have performed steady-state and frequency domain studies of the intrinsic fluorescence of this protein. The fluorescence properties reflect contributions from both types of tryptophan residues. One of these appears to be relatively exposed to solvent and the quencher, acrylamide; fluoresce with a lambda max of 345 nm; decay with a fluorescence lifetime of 6.3 ns; have a relatively red-shifted absorption spectrum; and have a certain degree of independent motional freedom, with respect to the protein. The other tryptophan residue appears to be more buried; fluoresce with lambda max of 325 nm; have a lifetime of 1.7 ns; have a relatively blue-shifted absorption spectrum; and not to enjoy independent motional freedom. On comparison of phase-resolved spectral data and solute quenching data, we suggest that resonance energy transfer between the blue and red tryptophan residues may occur. We also describe the strategy of simultaneously fitting Stern-Volmer quenching data collected at two emission wavelengths.  相似文献   

8.
The dipolar relaxation process induced by the excitation of the single tryptophan residue of four proteins (staphylococcal nuclease, ribonuclease-T1, phosphofructokinase, and superoxide dismutase) has been studied by dynamic fluorescence measurements. A new algorithm taking into account the relaxation effect has been applied to the fluorescence decay function obtained by phase-shift and demodulation data. This approach only requires that fluorescence be collected through the whole emission spectrum, avoiding the time-consuming determination of the data at different emission wavelengths, as usual with time-resolved emission spectroscopy. The results nicely match those reported in the literature for staphylococcal nuclease and ribonuclease-T1, demonstrating the validity of the model. Furthermore, this new methodology provides an alternative explanation for the complex decay of phosphofructokinase and human superoxide dismutase suggesting the presence of a relaxation process even in proteins that lack a lifetime-dependent spectral shift. These findings may have important implications on the analysis of small-scale protein dynamics, since dielectric relaxation directly probes a local structural change around the excited state of tryptophan.  相似文献   

9.
A frequency domain fluorescence study of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase has been performed to observe the effect of substrates on the structure and dynamics of the enzyme. At 20 degrees C and pH 7.2, a biexponential decay is observed for tryptophanyl emission. The short fluorescence lifetime (0.4 ns) component is associated with a spectrum having a 329-nm maximum and a 18.4-kJ/mol activation energy, Ea, for thermal quenching. The long-lifetime (3.5 ns) component has a 338-nm maximum and an Ea of only 7.9 kJ/mol. Tentatively we assign the short and long-lifetime components to Trp-333 and Trp-308. Binding of the substrates ATP and 3-phosphoglycerate leads to a significant increase in the fluorescence lifetime, the red shift of the emission spectrum and in the decrease in the Ea for both components. Acrylamide-quenching studies indicate that the two tryptophan residues have about the same degree of kinetic exposure to the quencher and that the binding of the substrates causes a very slight change in the quenching pattern. These fluorescence studies indicate that the binding of the substrates to phosphoglycerate kinase may influence the conformational dynamics around the two tryptophan residues located on one of the protein's domains.  相似文献   

10.
The DNA binding protein of the filamentous bacteriophage Pfl exhibits fluorescence from a single tryptophan residue. The location of the emission maximum at 340 nm ist quite common for proteins, but the single lifetime of 7.8 ns is one of the longest yet reported. Protein fluorescence is quenched more efficiently by Cs+ than by I-; the Trp is located in a partially exposed pocket, in the vicinity of a negative charge.In the native complex of the binding protein with Pfl DNA the fluorescence emission maximum is at 330 nm, indicating a more apolar environment for Trp 14. The native nucleoprotein complex exhibits a similar fluorescence lifetime (6.5 ns) and an approximately equal fluorescence yield, indicating the absence of Trp-DNA stacking. The tryptophan in the complex is virtually inaccessible to ionic quenchers, and thus appears to be buried.Fluorescence depolarisation measurements have been used to examine the rotational mobility of the tryptophan in the protein and in the nucleoprotein complex. In the protein alone a single rotational correlation time () of 19 ns is observed, corresponding to rotation of the entire dimeric molecule; in the native nucleoprotein complex with Pfl DNA, a of 500 ns is observed, corresponding to a rigid unit of at least 50 subunits. In neither case does the tryptophan exhibit any detectable flexibility on the subnanosecond time scale.  相似文献   

11.
S T Ferreira 《Biochemistry》1989,28(26):10066-10072
The fluorescence properties of the single tryptophan residue in whiting parvalbumin were used to probe the dynamics of the protein matrix. Ca2+ binding caused a blue-shift in the emission (from lambda max = 339 to 315 nm) and a 2.5-fold increase in quantum yield. The fluorescence decay was nonexponential in both Ca2(+)-free and Ca2(+)-bound parvalbumin and was best described by Lorentzian lifetime distributions centered around two components: a major long-lived component at 2-5 ns and a small subnanosecond component. Raising the temperature from 8 to 45 degrees C resulted in a decrease in both the center (average) and width (dispersion) of the major lifetime distribution component, whereas the center, width, and fractional intensity of the fast component increased with temperature. Arrhenius activation energies of 1.3 and 0.3 kcal/mol were obtained in the absence and in the presence of Ca2+, respectively, from the temperature dependence of the center of the major lifetime distribution component. Direct anisotropy decay measurements of local tryptophan rotations yielded an activation energy of 2.3 kcal/mol in Ca2(+)-depleted parvalbumin and indicated a correlation between rotational rates and lifetime distribution parameters (center and width). Ca2+ binding produced a decrease in the width of the major lifetime distribution component and a decrease in tryptophan rotational mobility within the protein. There was a rough correlation between these two parameters with changes in Ca2+ and temperature, so that both measurements may be taken to indicate that the structure of Ca2(+)-bound parvalbumin was more rigid than in Ca2(+)-depleted parvalbumin.  相似文献   

12.
A frequency-domain fluorescence study of calcium-binding metalloproteinase from Staphylococcus aureus has shown that this two-tryptophan-containing protein exhibits a double-exponential fluorescence decay. At 10 degrees C in 0.05 M Tris-HCl buffer (pH 9.0) containing 10 mM CaCl2, fluorescence lifetimes of 1.2 and 5.1 ns are observed. Steady-state and frequency-domain solute-quenching studies are consistent with the assignment of the two lifetimes to the two tryptophan residues. The tryptophan residue characterized by a shorter lifetime has a maximum of fluorescence emission at about 317 nm and the second one exhibits a maximum of its emission at 350 nm. These two residues contribute almost equally to the protein's fluorescence. These results, as well as fluorescence-quenching studies using KI and acrylamide as a quencher, indicate that in calcium-loaded metalloproteinase, the tryptophan residue characterized by the shorter lifetime is extensively buried within the protein. The second residue is exposed on the surface of the protein. The tryptophan residues of metalloproteinase have acrylamide dynamic-quenching rate constants, kq values, of 2.3 and 0.26 X 10(9) M-1 X s-1 for the exposed and buried residue, respectively. A study of the temperature dependence of the fluorescence lifetime for the two tryptophan components gives activation energies, Ea values, for thermal quenching of 1.8 and 2.2 kcal/mol for the buried and the exposed residue, respectively. Dissociation of Ca2+ from the protein causes a change in the protein's structure, as can be judged from dramatic changes which occur in the fluorescence properties of the buried tryptophan residue. These changes include an approx. 13 nm red-shift in the maximum of the fluorescence emission and an increase in the acrylamide-quenching rate constant, and they indicate that the removal of Ca2+ results in an increase in the exposure and the polarity of the microenvironment of this 'blue' residue.  相似文献   

13.
Rotational freedom of tryptophan residues in proteins and peptides   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
We studied the rotational motions of tryptophan residues in proteins and peptides by measurement of steady-state fluorescence anisotropies under conditions of oxygen quenching. By fluorescence quenching we can shorten the fluorescence lifetime and thereby decrease the average time for rotational diffusion prior to fluorescence emission. This method allowed measurement of rotational correlation times ranging from 0.03 to 50 ns, when the unquenched fuorescence lifetimes are near 4 ns. A wide range of proteins and peptides were investigated with molecular weights ranging from 200 to 80 000. Many of the chosen substances possessed a single tryptophan residue to minimize the uncertainties arising from a heterogeneous population of fluorophores. In addition, we also studied a number of multi-tryptophan proteins. Proteins were studied at various temperatures, under conditions of self-association, and in the presence of denaturants. A wide variety of rotational correlation times were found. As examples we note that the single tryptophan residue of myelin basic protein was highly mobile relative to overall protein rotation whereas tryptophan residues in human serum albumin, RNase T1, aldolase, and horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase were found to be immobile relative to the protein matrix. These results indicate that one cannot generalize about the extent of segmental mobility of the tryptophan residues in proteins. This physical property of proteins is highly variable between proteins and probably between different regions of the same protein.  相似文献   

14.
Adenosine deaminase, a purine salvage enzyme essential for immune competence, was studied by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. The heterogeneous emission from this four-tryptophan protein was separated into three lifetime components: tau 1 = 1 ns and tau 2 = 2.2 ns an emission maximum at about 330 nm and tau 3 = 6.3 ns with emission maximum at about 340 nm. Solvent accessibility of the tryptophan emission was probed with polar and nonpolar fluorescence quenchers. Acrylamide, iodide, and trichloroethanol quenched emission from all three components. Acrylamide quenching caused a blue shift in the decay-associated spectrum of component 3. The ground-state analogue enzyme inhibitor purine riboside quenched emission associated with component 2 whereas the transition-state analogue inhibitor deoxycoformycin quenched emission from both components 2 and 3. The quenching due to inhibitor binding had no effect on the lifetimes or emission maxima of the decay-associated spectra. These observations can be explained by a simple model of four tryptophan environments. Quenching studies of the enzyme-inhibitor complexes indicate that adenosine deaminase undergoes different protein conformation changes upon binding of ground- and transition-state analogue inhibitors. The results are consistent with localized structural alterations in the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
The nature of the heme environment in methemalbumin, the Fe(III) protoporphyrin IX (heme)-human serum albumin (HSA) complex, was investigated by optical spectroscopy. Comparison of the optical spectra of methemalbumin, ferro-hemalbumin in the absence and presence of 2-methylimidazole, and their carbon monoxide derivatives with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and its corresponding derivatives indicates that histidine is not present in the first coordination sphere of heme in methemalbumin and that the protein is devoid of a well-defined heme cavity. The complex exhibits peroxidase activity by catalyzing oxidation of 2,2'-azinobis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonate) by hydrogen peroxide. Its activity ( K(M)=433 microM, molar catalytic activity=0.33 s(-1)), however, is considerably lower compared to HRP, indicating differences in the heme environments. Fluorescence intensity decays of Trp214 in HSA and methemalbumin, best fitted to a three-exponential model, gave the lifetimes 7.03 ns (30%), 3.17 ns (38%), and 0.68 ns (32%) for HSA and 8.04 ns (1.7%), 2.42 ns (19.7%), and 0.64 ns (78.6%) for methemalbumin. These lifetime values were further confirmed by a model-independent maximum entropy method. Similarity in the lifetimes and variations in the amplitudes suggest that while conformational heterogeneity of HSA is unperturbed on heme binding, redistribution of the populations of the three conformations occurs and the sub-state associated with the shortest lifetime dominates the total population by approximately 80%. Decay associated spectra (DAS) indicate that the observed lifetime variation with wavelength is predominantly due to ground state heterogeneity, though solvent dipolar relaxation also contributes. Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements of the Trp214 residue yielded information on motion within the protein together with the whole protein molecule. The binding of heme did not affect the rotational correlation time of the albumin molecule (approximately 20 ns). However, the motion of tryptophan within the protein matrix increased by a factor of approximately 3 (0.46 ns to 0.15 ns). This indicates that while the overall hydrodynamic volume of the albumin molecule remained the same, tryptophan underwent a more rapid internal rotation because of the efficient energy transfer to the bound heme. Optical studies, analysis of lifetime measurements, DAS, and anisotropy measurements together suggest that heme binds to a surface residue. The rapid internal motion of Trp214 during its excited state lifetime for the approximately 80% populated conformer of methemalbumin allows the orientation factor, kappa(2), to approach the average value of 2/3. From the time-resolved fluorescence measurements and the energy transfer calculations on methemalbumin, a Trp214-heme distance of 22 A was deduced.  相似文献   

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

17.
J Lee  D J O'Kane  A J Visser 《Biochemistry》1985,24(6):1476-1483
The spectral properties are compared for two 6,7-dimethyl-8-ribityllumazine proteins from marine bioluminescent bacteria, one from a psychrophile, Photobacterium phosphoreum, and the other from a thermophile, Photobacterium leiognathi. The visible spectral properties, which are the ones by which the protein performs its biological function of bioluminescence emission, are almost the same for the two proteins: at 2 degrees C and 50 mM Pi, pH 7, fluorescence quantum yield phi F = 0.59 and 0.54, respectively; fluorescence lifetime tau = 14.4 and 14.8 ns, respectively; fluorescence maxima, both 475 nm; absorption maximum, 417 and 420 nm, respectively; circular dichroism minima at around 420 nm, both -41 X 10(3) deg cm2 dmol-1. The ligand binding sites therefore must provide very similar environments, and arguments are presented that the bound ligand is relatively exposed to solvent. The dissociation equilibrium was studied by steady-state fluorescence polarization. The thermophilic protein binds the ligand with Kd (20 degrees C) = 0.016 microM, 10 times more tightly than the other protein [Kd (20 degrees C) = 0.16 microM]. The origin of the binding difference probably resides in differences in secondary structure. The tryptophan fluorescence spectra of the two proteins are different, but more significant is an observation of the decay of the tryptophan emission anisotropy. For the psychrophilic lumazine protein this anisotropy decays to zero in 1 ns, implying that its single tryptophan residue lies in a very "floppy" region of the protein. For the other protein, the anisotropy exhibits both a fast component and a slow one corresponding to rotation of the protein as a whole.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The Archaebacterium Thermoplasma acidophilum has a histone-like protein (HTa) abundantly associated with its deoxyribonucleic acid. Each native tetrameric complex of HTa contains 20 phenylalanine residues, 4 tyrosine residues, and no tryptophan. When the protein was excited by radiation at 252 nm, which is a wavelength absorbed predominantly by phenylalanine, the fluorescent emission was mostly from tyrosine. According to the excitation spectrum for this tyrosine fluorescence, the cause was energy transfer from phenylalanine, which occurred with about 50% efficiency. When the tyrosine residues were removed enzymatically, the excited-state lifetime of the phenylalanine residues nearly doubled. Because of energy transfer, the tyrosine emission had two apparent fluorescence decay lifetimes; one lifetime (3.9 ns) was that of tyrosine while the second (12.1 ns) corresponded to the excited state of phenylalanine.  相似文献   

19.
We investigated the structure of the active RecA-DNA complex by analyzing the environment of tyrosine residue 65, which is on the DNA-binding surface of the protein. We prepared a modified RecA protein in which the tyrosine residue was replaced by tryptophan, a natural fluorescent reporter, and measured the change in its fluorescence upon binding of DNA and cofactor. The fluorescence of the inserted tryptophan 65 (Trp65) was centered at 345 nm, indicating a partly exposed residue. Binding cofactor, adenosine 5'-O-3-thiotriphosphate (ATPgammaS), alone at a low salt concentration did not change the fluorescence of Trp65, confirming that the residue is not close to the nucleotide. In contrast, the binding of single-stranded DNA quenched the fluorescence of Trp65 in both the presence and absence of ATPgammaS. Trp65 fluorescence was also quenched upon binding a second DNA strand. The fluorescence change depended upon the presence and absence of ATPgammaS, reflecting the difference in the DNA binding. These results indicate that residue 65 is close to both the first and second DNA strands. The degree of quenching depended upon the base composition of DNA, suggesting that the residue 65 interacts with the DNA bases. Binding of DNA with ATPgammaS as well as binding of ATPgammaS alone at high salt concentration shifted the fluorescence emission peak from 345 to 330 nm, indicating a change from a polar to a non-polar environment. Therefore, the environment change around residue 65 would also be linked to a change in conformation and thus the activation of the protein.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of GDP and of aurodox (N-methylkirromycin) on the affinity of elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) for aminoacyl-tRNA (aa-tRNA) have been quantified spectroscopically by using Phe-tRNA(Phe)-Fl8, a functionally active analogue of Phe-tRNA(Phe) with a fluorescein dye convalently attached to the s4U-8 base. The association of EF-Tu.GDP with Phe-tRNA(Phe)-Fl8 resulted in an average increase of 33% in fluorescein emission intensity. This spectral change was used to monitor the extent of ternary complex formation as a function of EF-Tu.GDP concentration, and hence to obtain a dissociation constant, directly and at equilibrium, for the EF-Tu.GDP-containing ternary complex. The Kd for the Phe-tRNA(Phe)-Fl8.EF-Tu.GDP complex was found to average 28.5 microM, more than 33,000-fold greater than the Kd of the Phe-tRNA(Phe)-Fl8.EF-Tu.GTP complex under the same conditions. In terms of free energy, the delta G degree for ternary complex formation at 6 degrees C was -11.5 kcal/mol with GTP and -5.8 kcal/mol with GDP. Thus, the hydrolysis of the ternary complex GTP results in a dramatic decrease in the affinity of EF-Tu for aa-tRNA, thereby facilitating the release of EF-Tu.GDP from the aa-tRNA on the ribosome. Aurodox (200 microM) decreased the Kd of the GDP complex by nearly 20-fold, to 1.46 microM, and increased the Kd of the GTP complex by at least 6-fold. The binding of aurodox to EF-Tu therefore both considerably strengthens EF-Tu.GDP affinity for aa-tRNA and also weakens EF-Tu.GTP affinity for aa-tRNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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