Abstract— The emission spectra of human adult hemoglobin A0 and its isolated α and ß subunits were obtained using a highly sensitive photon‐counting spectrofluorometer. The quantum yields of the emissions, relative to free tryptophan, were also measured as well as the excitation polarization spectra for hemoglobin A0 and apohemoglobin. The fluorophore bis‐ANS was utilized to probe for the presence of apoproteins in the hemoprotein preparations. The work suggests that tryptophan may be useful as an intrinsic probe to study dynamical processes in hemoglobin.
The catalytic oxidation of beta-D-glucose by the enzyme glucose oxidase involves a redox change of the flavin coenzyme. The structure and the dynamics of the two extreme glucose oxidase forms were studied by using infrared absorption spectroscopy of the amide I'band, tryptophan fluorescence quenching and hydrogen isotopic exchange. The conversion of FAD to FADH2 does not change the amount of alpha-helix present in the protein outer shell, but reorganizes a fraction of random coil to beta-sheet structure. The dynamics of the protein interior vary with the redox states of the flavin without affecting the motions of the structural elements near the protein surface. From the structure of glucose oxidase given by X-ray crystallography, these results suggest that the dynamics of the interface between the two monomers are involved in the catalytic mechanism.
The fluorescence decay kinetics of the tryptophyl residues of sperm whale and yellowfin tuna myoglobin have been determined by using time-correlated single photon counting, with picosecond resolution. Purification by HPLC techniques resulted in the isolation of samples that exclusively displayed picosecond decay kinetics. Lifetimes of 24.4 ps for Trp14 and 122.0 ps for Trp7 were found for oxy sperm whale myoglobin (pH 7), which agree with theoretical predictions [Hochstrasser, R. M., & Negus, D. K. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 4399-4403]. The effects of ligand binding and pH on the decay kinetics were investigated, and the results were shown to be consistent with the known crystal structures. Data for the met form of sperm whale myoglobin were analyzed both in terms of a sum of discrete exponential components and as a continuous gamma distribution of exponential decays. The results were not found to support the existence of multiple, structurally distinct conformation states in myoglobin.
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