Abstract

The binding of the fluorescent probe bis-ANS to chromogranin A, the major protein of adrenal chromaffin vesicles, caused a marked enhancement and blue shift in the fluorescence emission spectrum. The emission maximum shifted from 515 nm to 480 nm and the yield increased approx. 75-fold upon addition of 10 μM chromogranin A to 1 μM bis-ANS. Adenine nucleotides had clear effects on the bis-ANS fluorescence signal, while other nucleotides such as GTP, UTP and CTP had no discernible effect. Specifically, ATP caused a decrease in the fluorescence, whereas ADP and AMP caused a fluorescence increase. These results indicate adenine nucleotide binding to chromogranin A. Substitution of ATP with ε-ATP, an ATP derivative with a modification on the six-membered ring of the adenine base, failed to reduce the fluorescence intensity. Therefore, it was concluded that adenine bases play an important role in the chromogranin A-adenine nucleotide interaction.

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