Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of Schizosaccharomyces pombe mitochondrial F1-ATPase. A powerful probe for phosphate and nucleotide interactions.

BIOCHEMISTRY(1991)

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摘要
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.
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nucleotides
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