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1.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 135: 1107-14, 2015 Jan 25.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25173528

RÉSUMÉ

Electronic absorption and fluorescence spectral properties of new p-substituted-N-phenylpyrroles (N-PhPys), including HOPhPy, MeOPhPy, ThPhPy, PhDPy, DPhDPy, PyPhThThPhPy, and their available, electrosynthesized polymers were investigated. Electronic absorption spectra, fluorescence excitation and emission spectra, fluorescence quantum yields (ΦF) and lifetimes (τF), and other photophysical parameters of these N-PhPy derivatives and their polymers were measured in DMF, DMSO diluted solutions and/or solid state at room temperature. The electronic absorption spectra of N-PhPy derivatives and their polymers included one to several bands, located in the 270-395 nm region, according to the p-phenyl substituent electron-donating effect and conjugated heteroaromatic system length. The fluorescence excitation spectra were characterized by one broad main peak, with, in most cases, one (or more) poorly resolved shoulder (s), appearing in the 270-405 nm region, and their emission spectra were generally constituted of several bands located in the 330-480 nm region. No significant shift of the absorption, fluorescence excitation and emission spectra wavelengths was found upon going from the monomers to the corresponding polymers. ΦF values were high, varying between 0.11 and 0.63, according to the nature of substituents(s) and to the conjugated system extension. Fluorescence decays were mono-exponential for the monomers and poly-exponential for PyPhThThPhPy and for polymers. τF values were relatively short (0.35-5.17 ns), and markedly decreased with the electron-donor character of the phenyl group p-substituent and the conjugated system extension.


Sujet(s)
Électrochimie , Électrons , Modèles moléculaires , Polymères/composition chimique , Polymères/synthèse chimique , Pyrroles/composition chimique , Théorie quantique , Spectrométrie de fluorescence , Spectrophotométrie UV , Température
2.
Eur Biophys J ; 39(2): 241-53, 2010 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19693494

RÉSUMÉ

Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) is a powerful method for obtaining information about small-scale lengths between biomacromolecules. Visible fluorescent proteins (VFPs) are widely used as spectrally different FRET pairs, where one VFP acts as a donor and another VFP as an acceptor. The VFPs are usually fused to the proteins of interest, and this fusion product is genetically encoded in cells. FRET between VFPs can be determined by analysis of either the fluorescence decay properties of the donor molecule or the rise time of acceptor fluorescence. Time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy is the technique of choice to perform these measurements. FRET can be measured not only in solution, but also in living cells by the technique of fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM), where fluorescence lifetimes are determined with the spatial resolution of an optical microscope. Here we focus attention on time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy of purified, selected VFPs (both single VFPs and FRET pairs of VFPs) in cuvette-type experiments. For quantitative interpretation of FRET-FLIM experiments in cellular systems, details of the molecular fluorescence are needed that can be obtained from experiments with isolated VFPs. For analysis of the time-resolved fluorescence experiments of VFPs, we have utilised the maximum entropy method procedure to obtain a distribution of fluorescence lifetimes. Distributed lifetime patterns turn out to have diagnostic value, for instance, in observing populations of VFP pairs that are FRET-inactive.


Sujet(s)
Transfert d'énergie par résonance de fluorescence/méthodes , Protéines luminescentes/composition chimique , Spectrométrie de fluorescence/méthodes , Algorithmes , Bactéries , Protéines bactériennes/composition chimique , Calcium/composition chimique , Protéines de liaison au calcium/composition chimique , Protéines de liaison au calcium/génétique , Fluorescence , Protéines à fluorescence verte/composition chimique , Protéines luminescentes/génétique , Microscopie de fluorescence/méthodes , Facteurs temps
3.
Mol Biol (Mosk) ; 38(5): 848-57, 2004.
Article de Russe | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15554187

RÉSUMÉ

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase is one of three viral enzymes, and it realizes a key process of the viral replication cycle, i.e. viral DNA integration into infected cell genome. Integrase recognizes nucleotide sequences located at the ends of the viral DNA U3 and U5 LTRs and catalyzes 3'-processing and strand transfer reactions. To study the interactions between integrase and viral DNA at present work, we used modified integrase substrates mimicking the terminal U5 LTR sequence and containing non-nucleoside insertions in one or/and both strands. It is shown that the substrate modifications have no influence on the integrase binding rate, while the heterocyclic bases removal in the 5th and 6th substrate positions and in the 3rd position of the substrate processed strand distinctly inhibits the integrase catalytic activity. This fact demonstrates these bases significance for the active enzyme/substrate complex formation. On the contrary, modification of the 3rd position within substrate non-processed strand stimulates 3'-processing. Since heterocyclic base elimination results in disruption of the DNA complementary and staking interactions, this result shows that DNA double helix destabilization close to the cleaved bond promotes the 3'-processing.


Sujet(s)
ADN viral/composition chimique , Intégrase du VIH/physiologie , Répétition terminale longue du VIH/physiologie , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/enzymologie , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/génétique , ADN viral/métabolisme , Polarisation de fluorescence , Intégrase du VIH/génétique , Répétition terminale longue du VIH/génétique , Humains , Oligonucléotides/génétique , Spécificité du substrat , Intégration virale/physiologie
4.
Eur J Biochem ; 268(22): 5831-41, 2001 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11722570

RÉSUMÉ

The ability of phosphatidylethanolamine-binding protein (PEBP) to bind membranes was tested by using small and large unilamellar vesicles and monolayers composed of l-alpha-1,2-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, l-alpha-1,2-dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol and l-alpha-1,2-dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine. PEBP only bound to model membranes containing l-alpha-1,2-dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol; the interaction was primarily due to electrostatic forces between the basic protein and the acidic phospholipids. Further experiments indicated that the interaction was not dependent on the length and unsaturation of the phospholipid acyl chains and was not modified by the presence of cholesterol in the membrane. PEBP affinity for negatively charged membranes is puzzling considering the previous identification of the protein as a phosphatidylethanolamine-binding protein, and suggests that the association of PEBP with phospholipid membranes is driven by a mechanism other than its binding to solubilized phosphatidylethanolamine. An explanation was suggested by its three-dimensional structure: a small cavity at the protein surface has been reported to be the binding site of the polar head of phosphatidylethanolamine, while the N-terminal and C-terminal parts of PEBP, exposed at the protein surface, appear to be involved in the interaction with membranes. To test this hypothesis, we synthesized the two PEBP terminal regions and tested them with model membranes in parallel with the whole protein. Both peptides displayed the same behaviour as whole PEBP, indicating that they could participate in the binding of PEBP to membranes. Our results strongly suggest that PEBP directly interacts with negatively charged membrane microdomains in living cells.


Sujet(s)
Protéine de liaison aux androgènes , Protéines de transport/métabolisme , Membrane artificielle , Séquence d'acides aminés , Animaux , Protéines de transport/composition chimique , Bovins , Dichroïsme circulaire , Techniques in vitro , Modèles moléculaires , Données de séquences moléculaires , Protéines de transfert des phospholipides , Spectrométrie de fluorescence
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 98(18): 10090-5, 2001 Aug 28.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11504911

RÉSUMÉ

Self-assembly of HIV-1 integrase (IN) in solution has been studied previously by time-resolved fluorescence, using tryptophan anisotropy decay. This approach provides information on the size of macromolecules via the determination of rotational correlation times (theta). We have shown that, at submicromolar concentration, IN is characterized by a long rotational correlation time (theta(20 degrees C) = 90-100 ns) corresponding to a high-order oligomeric form, likely a tetramer. In the present work, we investigated the self-assembly properties of the DNA-bound IN by using three independent fluorophores. Under enzymatic assay conditions (10(-7) M IN, 2 x 10(-8) M DNA), using either fluorescein-labeled or fluorescent guanosine analog-containing oligonucleotides that mimic a viral end long terminal repeat sequence, we found that the DNA-IN complex was characterized by shorter theta(20 degrees C) values of 15.5-19.5 and 23-27 ns, calculated from experiments performed at 25 degrees C and 37 degrees C, respectively. These results were confirmed by monitoring the Trp anisotropy decay as a function of the DNA substrate concentration: the theta of IN shifted from 90-100 ns to lower values (<30 ns) upon increasing the DNA concentration. Again, the normalized theta(20 degrees C) values were significantly higher when monitored at 37 degrees C as compared with 25 degrees C. These results indicate that upon binding the viral DNA end, the multimeric enzyme undergoes a dissociation, most likely into a homogeneous monomeric form at 25 degrees C and into a monomer-dimer equilibrium at 37 degrees C.


Sujet(s)
ADN viral/métabolisme , Intégrase du VIH/composition chimique , Intégrase du VIH/métabolisme , Séquence nucléotidique , ADN viral/génétique , Polarisation de fluorescence , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/génétique , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/métabolisme , Humains , Techniques in vitro , Oligodésoxyribonucléotides/génétique , Oligodésoxyribonucléotides/métabolisme , Sous-unités de protéines , Tryptophane/composition chimique
6.
Biochemistry ; 40(30): 8773-82, 2001 Jul 31.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11467937

RÉSUMÉ

The homotropic and heterotropic interactions in Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase (EC 2.1.3.2) are accompanied by various structure modifications. The large quaternary structure change associated with the T to R transition, promoted by substrate binding, is accompanied by different local conformational changes. These tertiary structure modifications can be monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy, after introduction of a tryptophan fluorescence probe at the site of investigation. To relate unambiguously the fluorescence signals to structure changes in a particular region, both naturally occurring Trp residues in positions 209c and 284c of the catalytic chains were previously substituted with Phe residues. The regions of interest were the so-called 240's loop at position Tyr240c, which undergoes a large conformational change upon substrate binding, and the interface between the catalytic and regulatory chains in positions Asn153r and Phe145r supposed to play a role in the different regulatory processes. Each of these tryptophan residues presents a complex fluorescence decay with three to four independent lifetimes, suggesting that the holoenzyme exists in slightly different conformational states. The bisubstrate analogue N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate affects mostly the environment of tryptophans at position 240c and 145r, and the fluorescence signals were related to ligand binding and the quaternary structure transition, respectively. The binding of the nucleotide activator ATP slightly affects the distribution of the conformational substates as probed by tryptophan residues at position 240c and 145r, whereas the inhibitor CTP modifies the position of the C-terminal residues as reflected by the fluorescence properties of Trp153r. These results are discussed in correlation with earlier mutagenesis studies and mechanisms of the enzyme allosteric regulation.


Sujet(s)
Aspartate carbamoyltransferase/métabolisme , Colorants fluorescents/métabolisme , Tryptophane/métabolisme , Régulation allostérique/génétique , Asparagine/génétique , Aspartate carbamoyltransferase/composition chimique , Aspartate carbamoyltransferase/génétique , Acide aspartique/analogues et dérivés , Acide aspartique/métabolisme , Escherichia coli/enzymologie , Escherichia coli/génétique , Cinétique , Fragments peptidiques/composition chimique , Fragments peptidiques/génétique , Fragments peptidiques/métabolisme , Phénylalanine/génétique , Acide phosphono-acétique/analogues et dérivés , Acide phosphono-acétique/métabolisme , Spectrométrie de fluorescence/méthodes , Spécificité du substrat/génétique , Titrimétrie , Tryptophane/composition chimique , Tryptophane/génétique , Tyrosine/génétique
7.
Biophys J ; 81(1): 473-89, 2001 Jul.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11423430

RÉSUMÉ

Two molecular dynamics simulations have been carried out on the HIV-1 integrase catalytic core starting from fully determined crystal structures. During the first one, performed in the absence of divalent cation (6-ns long), the catalytic core took on two main conformations. The conformational transition occurs at approximately 3.4 ns. In contrast, during the second one, in the presence of Mg(2+) (4-ns long), there were no such changes. The molecular dynamics simulations were used to compute the fluorescence intensity decays emitted by the four tryptophan residues considered as the only chromophores. The decay was computed by following, frame by frame, the amount of chromophores that remained excited at a certain time after light absorption. The simulation took into account the quenching through electron transfer to the peptide bond and the fluorescence resonance energy transfer between the chromophores. The fit to the experimental intensity decays obtained at 5 degrees C and at 30 degrees C is very good. The fluorescence anisotropy decays were also simulated. Interestingly, the fit to the experimental anisotropy decay was excellent at 5 degrees C and rather poor at 30 degrees C. Various hypotheses such as dimerization and abnormal increase of uncorrelated internal motions are discussed.


Sujet(s)
Domaine catalytique , Intégrase du VIH/composition chimique , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/enzymologie , Séquence nucléotidique , Sites de fixation , Polarisation de fluorescence , Intégrase du VIH/métabolisme , Photons , Flexibilité , Structure secondaire des protéines , Spectrométrie de fluorescence , Thermodynamique , Tryptophane/métabolisme
8.
Biochemistry ; 39(31): 9275-84, 2000 Aug 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10924120

RÉSUMÉ

Self-assembly properties of HIV-1 integrase were investigated by time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy using tryptophanyl residues as a probe. From simulation analyses, we show that suitable photon counting leads to an accurate determination of long rotational correlation times in the range of 20-80 ns, permitting the distinction of the monomer, dimer, and tetramer from higher oligomeric forms of integrase. The accuracy of correlation times higher than 100 ns is too low to distinguish the octamer from other larger species. The oligomeric states of the widely used detergent-solubilized integrase were then studied in solution under varying parameters known to influence the activity. In the micromolar range, integrase exists as high-order multimers such as an octamer and/or aggregates and a well-defined tetramer, at 25 and 35 degrees C, respectively. However, integrase is monomeric at catalytically active concentrations (in the sub-micromolar range). Detergents (NP-40 and CHAPS) and divalent cation cofactors (Mg(2+) and Mn(2+)) have a clear dissociative effect on the high multimeric forms of integrase. In addition, we observed that Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) have different effects on both the oligomeric state and the conformation of the monomer. This could explain in part why these two metal cations are not equivalent in terms of catalytic activity in vitro. In contrast, addition of Zn(2+) stimulates dimerization. Interestingly, this role of Zn(2+) in the multimerization process was evident only in the presence of Mg(2+) which by itself does not induce oligomerization. Finally, it is highly suggested that the presence of detergent during the purification procedure plays a negative role in the proper self-assembly of integrase. Accordingly, the accompanying paper [Leh, H., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 9285-9294] shows that a detergent-free integrase preparation has self-assembly and catalytic properties different from those of the detergent-solubilized enzyme.


Sujet(s)
Polarisation de fluorescence , Intégrase du VIH/composition chimique , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/enzymologie , Cations divalents/composition chimique , Acides choliques/composition chimique , Simulation numérique , Détergents/composition chimique , Polarisation de fluorescence/méthodes , Intégrase du VIH/isolement et purification , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/physiologie , Humains , Magnésium/composition chimique , Manganèse/composition chimique , Modèles chimiques , Solutions , Spectrométrie de fluorescence , Température , Tryptophane/composition chimique , Assemblage viral , Zinc/composition chimique
9.
Biochemistry ; 39(31): 9285-94, 2000 Aug 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10924121

RÉSUMÉ

The relationship between Mg(2+)-dependent activity and the self-assembly state of HIV-1 integrase was investigated using different protein preparations. The first preparations, IN(CHAPS) and IN(dial), were purified in the presence of detergent, but in the case of IN(dial), the detergent was removed during a final dialysis. The third preparation, IN(zn), was purified without any detergent. The three preparations displayed comparable Mn(2+)-dependent activities. In contrast, the Mg(2+)-dependent activity that reflects a more realistic view of the physiological activity strongly depended on the preparation. IN(CHAPS) was not capable of using Mg(2+) as a cofactor, whereas IN(zn) was highly active under the same conditions. In the accompanying paper [Deprez, E., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 9275-9284], we used time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy to demonstrate that IN(CHAPS) was monomeric at the concentration of enzymatic assays. Here, we show that IN(zn) was homogeneously tetrameric under similar conditions. Moreover, IN(dial) that exhibited an intermediary Mg(2+)-dependent activity existed in a monomer-multimer equilibrium. The level of Mg(2+)- but not Mn(2+)-dependent activity of IN(dial) was altered by addition of detergent which plays a detrimental role in the maintenance of the oligomeric organization. Our results indicate that the ability of integrase to use Mg(2+) as a cofactor is related to its self-assembly state in solution, whereas Mn(2+)-dependent activity is not. Finally, the oligomeric IN(zn) was capable of binding efficiently to DNA regardless of the cationic cofactor, whereas the monomeric IN(CHAPS) strictly required Mn(2+). Thus, we propose that a specific conformation of integrase is a prerequisite for its binding to DNA in the presence of Mg(2+).


Sujet(s)
Intégrase du VIH/composition chimique , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/enzymologie , Magnésium/composition chimique , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/composition chimique , Acides choliques/composition chimique , ADN viral/composition chimique , Protéines de liaison à l'ADN/métabolisme , Détergents/composition chimique , Activation enzymatique/génétique , Intégrase du VIH/génétique , Intégrase du VIH/isolement et purification , Intégrase du VIH/métabolisme , Répétition terminale longue du VIH/génétique , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/génétique , VIH-1 (Virus de l'Immunodéficience Humaine de type 1)/physiologie , Humains , Manganèse/composition chimique , Mutagenèse dirigée , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/isolement et purification , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/métabolisme , Solubilité , Spécificité du substrat/génétique , Intégration virale/génétique , Zinc/composition chimique
10.
Eur J Biochem ; 253(2): 413-20, 1998 Apr 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9654091

RÉSUMÉ

The effects on the structure dynamics of the Escherichia coli wild-type formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg) protein of the single mutations Lys57-->Gly (FpgK57G), Pro2-->Gly (FpgP2G) and Pro2-->Glu (FpgP2E) were studied by fluorescence techniques, namely: lifetime measurements and acrylamide quenching of the fluorescence of Trp residues. The fluorescence decays of Fpg and its mutant forms were analysed by the maximum-entropy method and lifetime distributions in the range 200 ps to 9 ns were obtained. The lifetime distribution profiles of FpgK57G, FpgP2G and FpgP2E are different from that of wild-type Fpg. Both dynamic and static quenching by acrylamide were observed for all the proteins. At 20 degrees C, the bimolecular collisional quenching rate constant of the FpgP2E fluorescence by acrylamide was only 0.8 M(-1) s(-1) as compared to about 1.4 M(-1) s(-1) for the three other proteins. At 6 degrees C, all the spectroscopic properties of these four proteins are about the same. The analysis of experimental data demonstrates that all three mutations induce a structural reorganization of the Fpg protein. However, only the P2E mutation lead to a reduced accessibility of some Trp residues to acrylamide quenching. It is concluded that the single P2E replacement induces a conformational change leading to a more rigid globular structure as opposed to the wild type and K57G and P2G mutations. The influence of the single mutations on the enzyme activities of the Fpg protein is discussed.


Sujet(s)
Protéines bactériennes/composition chimique , Protéines Escherichia coli , Escherichia coli/enzymologie , N-Glycosyl hydrolases/composition chimique , Mutation ponctuelle , Acrylamide , Acrylamides/pharmacologie , Protéines bactériennes/génétique , DNA ligases/composition chimique , DNA ligases/génétique , DNA-formamidopyrimidine glycosylase , N-Glycosyl hydrolases/génétique , Mutation ponctuelle/génétique , Conformation des protéines , Spectrométrie de fluorescence , Tryptophane/composition chimique
11.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1371(2): 265-83, 1998 May 28.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9630666

RÉSUMÉ

A cationic amphiphilic peptide made of 10 leucine and 10 lysine residues, and four of its fluorescent derivatives in which leucines were substituted by Trp residues at different locations on the primary sequence have been synthesized. The interactions of these five peptides with neutral anionic or cationic vesicles were investigated using circular dichroism, steady state and time-resolved fluorescence with a combination of Trp quenching by brominated lipid probes, monolayers, modeling with minimization and simulated annealing procedures. We show that all the five peptides interact with neutral and anionic DMPC, DMPG, DOPC or egg yolk PC vesicles. The binding takes place whatever the peptide conformation in solution is. In the case of DMPC bilayers the binding free energy DeltaG is estimated at -8 kcal mole-1 and the number of phospholipid molecules involved is about 20-25 per peptide molecule. Peptides are bound as single-stranded alpha helices orientated parallel to the bilayer surface. In the anchoring of phospholipid head groups around the peptides, the lipid molecules are not smeared out in a plane parallel to the membrane surface but are organized around the hydrophilic face of the alpha helices like 'wheat grains around an ear' and protrude outside the bilayer towards the solvent. We suggest that such a lipid arrangement generates transient structural defects responsible for the membrane permeability enhancement. When an electrical potential is applied, the axis of the peptide helices remains parallel to the membrane surface and does not reorient to give rise to a bundle of helix monomers that forms transmembrane channels via a 'barrel stave' mechanism. The penetration depth of alpha helices in relation to the position of phosphorus atoms in the unperturbed lipid leaflet is estimated at 3.2 A.


Sujet(s)
Liposomes/composition chimique , Modèles chimiques , Modèles moléculaires , Peptides/synthèse chimique , Tensioactifs/composition chimique , Séquence d'acides aminés , Anions , Cations , Dichroïsme circulaire , Potentiels de membrane , Membrane artificielle , Données de séquences moléculaires , Peptides/composition chimique , Phosphatidylcholines/composition chimique , Liaison aux protéines , Spectrométrie de fluorescence , Thermodynamique , Tryptophane/composition chimique
12.
Biochemistry ; 37(9): 3013-9, 1998 Mar 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9485453

RÉSUMÉ

The effects of the solvent conditions (buffer pH 9, 8, or 7 or buffer pH 6.5 alone or mixed with 3.2% ethanol or 6.2% formamide) on the protein dynamics of horse apomyoglobin were investigated through tryptophan fluorescence quenching, spectra, and decay properties. Raising the pH (which induces discontinuous protein conformation changes) increases the structural fluctuations inside the hydrophobic A, G, and H helix core. Mixed solutions containing either 3.2% ethanol or 6.2% formamide (which redistribute water molecules on the protein surface) produce protein dynamics changes in the vicinity of the two Trp residues, without inducing particular constraints on these very residues. Formamide increases, in the same way, the polarity and the protein flexibility while ethanol reduces both. The present fluorescence work also shows that, whatever the outside solvent, the two Trp residues W7 and W14, embedded in the A, G, and H helix core, are equally and statistically reached by small molecules diffusing inside the protein matrix. Hydrogen-tritium exchange measurements on the protein in mixed solvents reveal that the dynamics of the A, G, and H helix cluster and of the B and E helixes are greatly influenced by the nature of the outside medium. A small amount of formamide in the buffer increases the protein fluctuations while an ethanol-water mixture reduces them. We suggest that the hydratation state of the protein surface could be the relevant parameter of the protein dynamics.


Sujet(s)
Apoprotéines/composition chimique , Myoglobine/composition chimique , Solvants , Animaux , Equus caballus , Métmyoglobine/composition chimique , Myocarde/composition chimique , Conformation des protéines , Spectrométrie de fluorescence , Tryptophane/composition chimique
13.
Biophys J ; 74(4): 1864-70, 1998 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9545048

RÉSUMÉ

The effects of hydrostatic pressure and temperature on the phase behavior and physical properties of the binary mixture palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine/cholesterol, over the 0-40 molar % range of cholesterol compositions, were determined from the changes in the fluorescence lifetime distribution and anisotropy decay parameters of the natural lipid trans-parinaric acid (t-PnA). Pressurized samples were excited with a Ti-sapphire subpicosecond laser, and fluorescence decays were analyzed by the quantified maximum entropy method. Above the transition temperature (T(T) = -5 degrees C), at atmospheric pressure, two liquid-crystalline phases, alpha and beta, are formed in this system. At each temperature and cholesterol concentration below the transition pressure, the fluorescence lifetime distribution pattern of t-PnA was clearly modulated by the pressure changes. Pressure increased the fraction of the liquid-ordered beta-phase and its order parameter, but it decreased the amount of cholesterol in this phase. Palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine/cholesterol phase diagrams were also determined as a function of temperature and hydrostatic pressure.


Sujet(s)
Cholestérol/composition chimique , Double couche lipidique/composition chimique , Phénomènes biophysiques , Biophysique , Acides gras insaturés , Polarisation de fluorescence , Colorants fluorescents , Pression hydrostatique , Phosphatidylcholines/composition chimique , Température
14.
Biopolymers ; 36(1): 1-8, 1995 Jul.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7605900

RÉSUMÉ

The absorption, CD, and fluorescence emission spectra, and the fluorescence emission and depolarization lifetimes of the human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (hGM-CSF) and related peptides previously tested for their immunological activity, were measured in water at various pHs and temperatures to obtain information on their conformation in solution. The aim was to correlate the amino acid sequences, and the chain conformations and dynamics of the peptides, with their immunological properties. The CD spectrum of hGM-CSF revealed, as expected, a structure in solution similar to that in the crystalline state, but the fluorescence data suggest that the Trp 122 residue is more accessible to the solvent than the x-ray data would lead one to expect. They also suggest that some flexibility exists between the protein's two domains, one made up of the alpha-helices A and C and the other of the alpha-helices B and D plus the two beta-strands. In aqueous solution, none of the tested peptide CD spectra could be linked to a recognizable ordered conformation, i.e., an alpha-helix or a beta-sheet. The fluorescence of the peptide 11-24 suggests that the Trp 13 residue may appear in two types of situations: (a) in aqueous solution and (b) within a globular structure. Its CD spectra show that the tryptophan residue exists in both cases in a highly asymmetric environment independent of the pH.


Sujet(s)
Facteur de stimulation des colonies de granulocytes et de macrophages/analyse , Peptides/analyse , Dichroïsme circulaire , Humains , Conformation des protéines , Solutions , Spectrométrie de fluorescence , Eau
15.
Biophys J ; 68(3): 978-87, 1995 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7756560

RÉSUMÉ

The presence of two liquid-crystalline phases, alpha and beta, in mixed bilayers of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine/cholesterol was detected by the changes in the distribution of the fluorescence lifetimes of t-PnA, as analyzed by the Maximum Entropy Method. The formation of the liquid-ordered beta-phase, in the 30-40 degrees C temperature range as a function of cholesterol concentration (0-40 mol%), could be related quantitatively to the relative amplitude of a long lifetime component of the probe (10-14 ns). Based on this evidence, the phase behavior of mixtures of the unsaturated lipid palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine and cholesterol was determined using the same technique, for cholesterol concentrations in the 0-50 mol% range, between 10 and 40 degrees C. It was found that two liquid-crystalline phases are also formed in this system, with physical properties reminiscent of the alpha- and beta-phases formed with saturated lipids. However, in this case it was determined that, for temperatures in the physiological range, the alpha- and beta-phases coexist up to 40 mol% cholesterol. This finding may be of significant biological relevance, because it supports the long held notion that cholesterol is responsible for the lipid packing heterogeneity of several natural membranes rich in unsaturated lipid components.


Sujet(s)
Cholestérol/composition chimique , Acides gras insaturés/composition chimique , Double couche lipidique/composition chimique , Phénomènes biophysiques , Biophysique , Dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine/composition chimique , Polarisation de fluorescence , Colorants fluorescents , Techniques in vitro , Phosphatidylcholines/composition chimique
16.
J Fluoresc ; 5(2): 193-4, 1995 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24226664

RÉSUMÉ

The new quantified version of the maximum entropy method allows one to recover lifetime distributions with a precise statement of the accuracy of position, surface, and broadness of peaks in the distribution. Applications to real data (2,6-ANS in aqueous solutions of sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles of Β-cyclodextrin) are presented.

17.
J Fluoresc ; 5(2): 205-15, 1995 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24226666

RÉSUMÉ

After purification to homogeneity by Bio-Rex 70 ion exchange chromatography, micromolar solutions ofNaja nigricollis cardiotoxin were found to contain significant amounts of aggregates, as detected by time-resolved polarized fluorescence of its single tryptophan residue. The level of cardiotoxin aggregation depends strongly and reversibly on the protein concentration and pH. However, supplementary reverse-phase HPLC completely suppresses this aggregation, resulting in all cases in fluorescence anisotropy decays characteristic of the pure cardiotoxin monomer. The self-association properties of cardiotoxin, in the presence of a possible cofactor eliminated by the HPLC step, may be functionally relevant, and would deserve further investigation. The physical heterogeneity of the cardiotoxin samples required an appropriate model for the analysis of fluorescence depolarization, which was iteratively improved by comparison with experimental results. In this way, an approximate molar fraction of 10-15% aggregated cardiotoxin at a 90ΜM total protein concentration, pH 7, was determined. The fluorescence of the partly aggregated samples is significantly perturbed as compared to the HPLC-treated monomer, indicating that the cardiotoxin aggregate must have an increased average fluorescence lifetime and a strongly decreased initial anisotropy. The decrease in initial anisotropy suggests either an increased mobility of the tryptophan residue upon aggregation or fast energy transfers between residues of different cardiotoxin molecules brought within a short distance in the aggregate. This study illustrates the high sensitivity of the time-resolved fluorescence technique, through both total fluorescence and anisotropy parameters, to low levels of physical or chemical heterogeneity in a protein sample.

18.
Biochemistry ; 33(9): 2610-9, 1994 Mar 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8117723

RÉSUMÉ

The local environment and dynamics of the single tryptophan residue in the respective active loops of cardiotoxin and alpha-neurotoxin from Naja nigricollis and of erabutoxin b from Laticauda semifasciata have been studied by steady-state and time-resolved polarized fluorescence and analyzed with distributions of decay times. Trp11 in loop I of cardiotoxin exhibits a very broad and complex distribution of fluorescence lifetimes at 20 degrees C. Despite its relatively external location in the toxin, the residue appears to be partly shielded from water and shows restricted but significant conformational fluctuations on the picosecond and nanosecond time scales. The thermal stability of cardiotoxin allowed a study of its static and dynamic fluorescence properties over a large range of temperatures. Interconversions in the intermediate nanosecond range lead to a thorough reorganization of the cardiotoxin fluorescence lifetime distribution with temperature. On the contrary, the fluorescence kinetics of Trp29 in loop II of the two neurotoxins is dominated by about 80% of a major decay time, which suggests that a nearly unique local conformation of the toxin is maintained over all time scales above the sub-nanosecond range. The fluorescence anisotropy decays show that the residue also has extremely limited rotational freedom down to the picosecond time scale. These findings are in good agreement with structural and dynamic information previously reported on the different toxins from NMR and X-ray crystallographic studies. The different dynamic properties around the tryptophan residue of the cardiotoxin and neurotoxin active loops can be analyzed within the frame of their different respective mechanisms of toxicity.


Sujet(s)
Cardiotoxines de venin de cobra/composition chimique , Venins des élapidés/composition chimique , Érabutoxines/composition chimique , Neurotoxines/composition chimique , Séquence d'acides aminés , Polarisation de fluorescence , Cinétique , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique , Données de séquences moléculaires , Déplacement , Structure tertiaire des protéines , Température , Tryptophane/composition chimique
20.
Biophys J ; 65(5): 2237-47, 1993 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8298047

RÉSUMÉ

Fluid heterogeneity in lipid bilayers and shows a simple and useful method to quantify this heterogeneity. Taking advantage of the maximum entropy method, we have resolved the probe fluorescence lifetime distributions in homogeneous solutions and in single and two-component lipid bilayers at different temperatures. A precise description of the emission kinetics was obtained as a function of viscosity in the homogeneous solution and as a function of the phase composition (gel/fluid) in the lipid bilayers. These data show, unambiguously, that the same distribution pattern, with two well resolved lifetime classes, is observed both in pure solvents and in fluid bilayers. This distribution is modified during the thermotropic phase transition, with the appearance of a long lifetime component. The anisotropy experiments confirm that the amplitude of this component is proportional to the fraction of probe located in the gel phase. From this fraction we have quantified the amount of gel phase in the binary bilayer system dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine/dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and determined the thermotropic phase diagram of the mixture. This phase diagram agrees well with that calculated assuming ideal mixing of the lipids (Marbrey, S., and J.M. Sturtevant. 1976. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 73:862-3866).


Sujet(s)
Acides gras insaturés , Double couche lipidique/composition chimique , 1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/composition chimique , Phénomènes biophysiques , Biophysique , Dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine/composition chimique , Polarisation de fluorescence , Colorants fluorescents , Cinétique , Phosphatidylcholines/composition chimique , Solvants
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