| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
Biophys J, December 1999, p. 3071-3084, Vol. 77, No. 6
*Section de Biophysique des Protéines et des Membranes, Département de Biologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire et URA 2096 (CNRS), CEA Saclay, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, and #Laboratoire pour l'Utilisation du Rayonnement Electromagnétique, Université Paris-Sud, F-91898 BP34 Orsay, France
The fluorescence properties of tryptophan octyl ester
(TOE), a hydrophobic model of Trp in proteins, were investigated in various mixed micelles of dodecylmaltoside (DM) and 7,8-dibromododecyl
-maltoside (BrDM) or 10,11-dibromoundecanoyl
-maltoside (BrUM). This study focuses on the mechanism via which these brominated detergents quench the fluorescence of TOE in a micellar system. The
experiments were performed at a pH at which TOE is uncharged and almost
completely bound to detergent micelles. TOE binding was monitored by
its enhanced fluorescence in pure DM micelles or its quenched
fluorescence in pure BrUM or BrDM micelles. In DM/BrUM and DM/BrDM
mixed micelles, the fluorescence intensity of TOE decreased, as a
nonlinear function of the molar fraction of brominated detergent, to
almost zero in pure brominated detergent. The indole moiety of TOE is
therefore highly accessible to the bromine atoms located on the
detergent alkyl chain because quenching by bromines occurs by direct
contact with the fluorophore. TOE is simultaneously poorly accessible
to iodide (I
), a water-soluble collisional quencher. TOE
time-resolved fluorescence intensity decay is heterogeneous in pure DM
micelles, with four lifetimes (from 0.2 to 4.4 ns) at the maximum
emission wavelength. Such heterogeneity may arise from dipolar
relaxation processes in a motionally restricted medium, as suggested by
the time-dependent (nanoseconds) red shift (11 nm) of the TOE emission
spectrum, and from the existence of various TOE conformations.
Time-resolved quenching experiments for TOE in mixed micelles showed
that the excited-state lifetime values decreased only slightly with
increases in the proportion of BrDM or BrUM. In contrast, the relative
amplitude of the component with the longest lifetime decreased
significantly relative to that of the short-lived species. This is
consistent with a mainly static mechanism for the quenching of TOE by
brominated detergents. Molecular modeling of TOE (in vacuum and in
water) suggested that the indole ring was stabilized by folding back upon the octyl chain, forming a hairpin conformation. Within micelles, the presence of such folded conformations, making it possible for the
entire molecule to be located in the hydrophobic part of the micelle,
is consistent with the results of fluorescence quenching experiments.
TOE rotational correlation time values, in the nanosecond range, were
consistent with a hindered rotation of the indole moiety and a rotation
of the complete TOE molecule in the pure DM or mixed detergent
micelles. These results, obtained with a simple micellar model system,
provide a basis for the interpretation of fluorescence quenching by
brominated detergents in more complex systems such as protein- or
peptide-detergent complexes.
Biophys J, December 1999, p. 3071-3084, Vol. 77, No. 6
© 1999 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/99/12/3071/14 $2.00
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
M. Vincent, B. de Foresta, and J. Gallay Nanosecond Dynamics of a Mimicked Membrane-Water Interface Observed by Time-Resolved Stokes Shift of LAURDAN Biophys. J., June 1, 2005; 88(6): 4337 - 4350. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
E. Le Rumeur, Y. Fichou, S. Pottier, F. Gaboriau, C. Rondeau-Mouro, M. Vincent, J. Gallay, and A. Bondon Interaction of Dystrophin Rod Domain with Membrane Phospholipids. EVIDENCE OF A CLOSE PROXIMITY BETWEEN TRYPTOPHAN RESIDUES AND LIPIDS J. Biol. Chem., February 14, 2003; 278(8): 5993 - 6001. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |