Multiple tryptophan (Trp) proteins are not amenable to fluorescence study because individual residue emission is not resolvable. Biosynthetic incorporation of an indole analogue such as 5-hydroxyindole has not provided sufficient spectroscopic resolution because of low quantum yield and small emission shift. Here, 5-hydroxyindole is used as the starting framework for building a blue emitting fluorophore of high quantum yield, 2-phenyl-6H-oxazolo[4,5-e]indole (PHOXI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral peptides and a protein with an inter- or intramolecular cation-π interaction between tryptophan (Trp) and an amine cation are shown to absorb and fluoresce in the visible region of the spectrum. Titration of indole with sodium hydroxide or ammonium hydroxide yields an increasing visible fluorescence as well. Visible absorption and multipeaked fluorescence excitation spectra correlate with experimental absorption spectra and the vibrational modes of calculated absorption spectra for the neutral Trp radical.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe results of quantum yield (QY) study of tryptophanyl glutamate (Trp-Glu), tryptophanyl lysine (Trp-Lys) and lysinyl tryptophan (Lys-Trp) dipeptides over the pH range, 1.5 - 13, show that the charge state of the N-terminal amine, and not the nominal molecular charge determines the QY. When the terminal amine is protonated, QY is low (10) for all three dipeptides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral nonradiative processes compete with tryptophan fluorescence emission. The difficulty in spectral interpretation lies in associating specific molecular environmental features with these processes and thereby utilizing the fluorescence spectral data to identify the local environment of tryptophan. Here, spectroscopic and molecular modeling study of Lys-Trp dipeptide charged species shows that backbone-ring interactions are undistinguished.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular dynamics (MD), coupled with fluorescence data for charged dipeptides of tryptophanyl glutamic acid (Trp-Glu), reveal a detailed picture of how specific conformation affects fluorescence. Fluorescence emission spectra and time-resolved emission measurements have been collected for all four charged species. MD simulations 20 to 30 ns in length have also been carried out for the Trp-Glu species, as simulation provides aqueous phase conformational data that can be correlated with the fluorescence data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTryptophyl glycine (TrpGly) and glycyl tryptophan (GlyTrp) dipeptides at pH 5.5 and pH 9.3 show a pattern of fluorescence emission shifts with the TrpGly zwitterion emission solely blue shifted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough tryptophan is a natural probe of protein structure, interpretation of its fluorescence emission spectrum is complicated by the presence of two electronic transitions, (1)L(a) and (1)L(b). Theoretical calculations show that a point charge adjacent to either ring of the indole can shift the emission maximum. This study explores the effect of pyrrole and benzyl ring substitutions on the transitions' energy via absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy, and anisotropy and lifetime measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe correlation of the UVRR nuW3 mode with the tryptophan chi(2,1) dihedral angle [Maruyama and Takeuchi (1995) J. Raman Spectrosc. 26, 319; Miura et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA range of conformationally distinct functional states within the T quaternary state of hemoglobin are accessed and probed using a combination of mutagenesis and sol-gel encapsulation that greatly slow or eliminate the T --> R transition. Visible and UV resonance Raman spectroscopy are used to probe the proximal strain at the heme and the status of the alpha(1)beta(2) interface, respectively, whereas CO geminate and bimolecular recombination traces in conjunction with MEM (maximum entropy method) analysis of kinetic populations are used to identify functionally distinct T-state populations. The mutants used in this study are Hb(Nbeta102A) and the alpha99-alpha99 cross-linked derivative of Hb(Wbeta37E).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonastrol is a small molecule inhibitor that is specific for Eg5, a member of the kinesin 5 family of mitotic motors. Crystallographic models of Eg5 in the presence and absence of monastrol revealed that drug binding produces a variety of structural changes in the motor, including in loop L5 and the neck linker. What is not clear from static crystallographic models, however, is the sequence of structural changes produced by drug binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious mutational studies on Tyr42alpha variants as well as the current studies on the mutant hemoglobin alphaY42A show that the intersubunit interactions associated with Tyr42alpha significantly stabilize the alpha1beta2 interface of the quaternary-T deoxyhemoglobin tetramer. However, crystallographic studies, UV and visible resonance Raman spectroscopy, CO combination kinetic measurements, and oxygen binding measurements on alphaY42A show that the intersubunit interactions formed by Tyr42alpha have only a modest influence on the structural properties and ligand affinity of the deoxyhemoglobin tetramer. Therefore, the alpha1beta2 interface interactions associated with Tyr42alpha do not contribute significantly to the quaternary constraints that are responsible for the low oxygen affinity of deoxyhemoglobin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOxygen binding curves of sol-gel-encapsulated deoxy human adult hemoglobin (HbA) have previously revealed two distinct noncooperative populations with oxygen binding affinities approximately 1000 and 100 times lower than that of the high-affinity R state. The two populations which have been termed the low-affinity (LA) and high-affinity (HA) T states can be selectively stabilized using two different encapsulation protocols for deoxy-HbA. The present study seeks to understand the factors giving rise to these different affinity states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe N-terminal tau 2-19 peptide undergoes gelation, syneresis, and aggregation over a period of years. These changes may be approximated on a shorter time scale by agitation and partial dehydration. The anomalously enhanced (229 nm) ultraviolet resonance Raman (UVRR) imide II band reveals a common structural feature for gels of nondehydrated tau 2-19 and collagen I and insoluble paired helical filaments (PHFs) and collagen I of weak hydrogen bonding at proline carbonyls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe impact upon molecular structure of an additional point mutation adjacent to the existing E6V mutation in sickle cell hemoglobin was probed spectroscopically. The UV resonance Raman results show that the conformational consequences of mutating the salt bridge pair, betaGlu(7)-betaLys(132), are dependent on which residue of the pair is modified. The betaK132A mutants exhibit the spectroscopic signatures of the R --> T state transition in both the "hinge" and "switch" regions of the alpha(1)beta(2) interface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe reactive sulfhydryl group on Cys beta93 in human adult hemoglobin (HbA) has been the focus of many studies because of its importance both as a site for synthetic manipulation and as a possible binding site for nitric oxide (NO) in vivo. Despite the interest in this site and the known functional alterations associated with manipulation of this site, there is still considerable uncertainty as to the conformational basis for these effects. UV resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy is used in this study to evaluate the conformational consequences of chemically modifying the Cys beta93 sulfhydryl group of both the deoxy and CO-saturated derivatives of HbA using different maleimide and mixed disulfide reagents.
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