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Journal ArticleDOI

Exposure of tryptophanyl residues in proteins. Quantitative determination by fluorescence quenching studies.

Maurice R. Eftink, +1 more
- 10 Feb 1976 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 3, pp 672-680
TLDR
The value of this probing technique lies in its ability to sense not only the steady-state exposure of a residue in a protein, but also its dynamic exposure.
Abstract
Acrylamide is an efficient quencher of tryptophanyl fluorescence which we report to be very discriminating in sensing the degree of exposure of this residue in proteins. The quenching reaction involves physical contact between the quencher and an excited indole ring, and can be kinetically described in terms of a collisional and a static component. The rate constant for the collisional component is a kinetic measure of the exposure of a residue in a protein, and values ranging from 4 X 10(9) M-1 S-1 for the fully exposed tryptophan in the polypeptide, adrenocorticotropin, to less than 5 X 10(8) M-1 S-1 for the buried residue in azurin have been found. Static quenching is readily detected in proteins that are denatured, or contain only a single fluorophor. Quenching patterns for most multi-tryptophan containing proteins are difficult to analyze precisely, but qualitative information can, nevertheless, be extracted. Applications of this probing technique for monitoring protein conformational changes, such as the acid-induced expansion of human serum albumin, and inhibitor binding to enzymes, are presented. The value of this method lies in its ability to sense not only the steady-state exposure of a residue in a protein, but also its dynamic exposure.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Resolution of the fluorescence of the buried tryptophan in yeast 3-phosphoglycerate kinase using succinimide

TL;DR: The heterogeneous fluorescence of yeast 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, a hinge-bending enzyme with two tryptophans, has been resolved into two approximately equal components, one accessible and one inaccessible to the relatively inefficient quencher succinimide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Partly folded states of bovine carbonic anhydrase interact with zwitterionic and anionic lipid membranes.

TL;DR: Large blue shifts in the fluorescence emission spectra and the decrease in the exposure to water-soluble acrylamide quencher of Trp fluorescence strongly suggest that BCAII penetrates the hydrocarbon domain in the POPG-protein complexes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Destabilization of membranes containing cardiolipin or its precursors by peptides derived from mitogaligin, a cell death protein.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that synthetic peptides enclosing the mitochondrial localization signal of mitogaligin bind to anionic biological membranes leading to membrane destabilization, aggregation, and content leakage of mitochondria or liposomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structural characterization of the M* partly folded intermediate of wild type and P138A aspartate aminotransferase from Escherichia coli.

TL;DR: Differences between the two M* species indicated that in WT-M* Pro138 is in the cis conformation at this stage of the folding process, and hydrogen/deuterium exchange results showed the occurrence of few differences in the native N2 forms of WT and P138A, the spectroscopic features and crystallographic structures of which are almost superimposable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quenching of fluorescent nucleotides bound to myosin: a probe of the active-site conformation.

TL;DR: Nucleotides in the myOSin pocket do not become more accessible to the solvent when myosin binds to actin in either rigor-ADP or active complexes, and the quenching curve was biphasic, indicating that the nucleotide pocket of myos in can exist in both a closed form that allows little quench and a more open form that allowing considerable quenched.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The interpretation of protein structures: estimation of static accessibility.

TL;DR: The accessibility of atoms in the twenty common amino acids in model tripeptides of the type Ala-X-Ala are given for defined conformation and the larger non-polar amino acids tend to be more “buried” in the native form of all three proteins.
Journal ArticleDOI

Removal of Fatty Acids from Serum Albumin by Charcoal Treatment

TL;DR: Fluorescence spectra of human serum albumin samples indicated that impurities are sometimes present which can be removed by charcoal at neutral pH, and acid-charcoal treatment is a much more rapid method of removing lipid impurities than other methods previously described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solute perturbation of protein fluorescence. The quenching of the tryptophyl fluorescence of model compounds and of lysozyme by iodide ion.

Sherwin S. Lehrer
- 17 Aug 1971 - 
TL;DR: The results of the model compound study provide evidence for a mechanism that follows the classical Stern-Volmer law (1919), predominantly involving collisional quenching, and illustrate the importance of local charge and solvent viscosity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photoluminescence of solutions

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