Abstract

While the fluorescence decay kinetics of tyrosine model compounds [Laws, W. R., Ross, J. B. A., Wyssbrod, H. R., Beechem, J. M., Brand, L., & Sutherland, J. C. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 599-607] and the tyrosine residue in oxytocin [Ross, J. B. A., Laws, W. R., Buku, A., Sutherland, J. C., & Wyssbrod, H. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 607-612] can be explained in terms of heterogeneity derived from the three ground-state chi 1 rotamers, a similar correlation has yet to be directly observed for a tryptophan residue. In addition, the asymmetric indole ring might also lead to heterogeneity from chi 2 rotations. In this paper, the time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence properties of [tryptophan2]oxytocin at pH 3 are presented and compared with 1H NMR results. According to the unrestricted analyses of individual fluorescence decay curves taken as a function of emission wavelength and a global analysis of these decay curves for common emission wavelength-independent decay constants, only three exponential terms are required. In addition, the preexponential weighting factors (amplitudes) have the same relative relationship (weights) as the 1H NMR-determined chi 1 rotamer populations of the indole side chain. 15N was used in heteronuclear coupling experiments to confirm the rotamer assignments. Inclusion of a linked function restricting the decay amplitudes to the chi 1 rotamer populations in the individual decay curve analyses and in the global analysis confirms this correlation. According to qualitative nuclear Overhauser data, there are two chi 2 populations. Depending upon the degree of correlation between chi 2 and chi 1, there may be from three to six side-chain conformations for the tryptophan residue. The combined fluorescence and NMR results are consistent with a rotamer model in which either (i) the chi 2 rotations are fast compared to the fluorescence intensity decay of the tryptophan residue, (ii) environmental factors affecting fluorescence intensity decay properties are dominated by chi 1 interactions, or (iii) the chi 2 and chi 1 rotations are highly correlated.

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