Abstract
We have investigated the microsecond rotational motions of the Ca-ATPase in rabbit skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), by measuring the time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy of erythrosin 5-isothiocyanate (ERITC) covalently and specifically attached to the enzyme. Over a wide range of solvent conditions and temperatures, the phosphorescence anisotropy decay was best fit by a sum of three exponentials plus a constant term. At 4 degrees C, the rotational correlation times were phi 1 = 13 +/- 3 microseconds, phi 2 = 77 +/- 11 microseconds, and phi 3 = 314 +/- 23 microseconds. Increasing the solution viscosity with glycerol caused very little effect on the correlation times, while decreasing the lipid viscosity with diethyl ether decreased the correlation times substantially, indicating that the decay corresponds to rotation of the protein within the membrane, not to vesicle tumbling. The normalized residual anisotropy (A infinity) is insensitive to viscosity and temperature changes, supporting the model of uniaxial rotation of the protein about the membrane normal. The value of A infinity (0.20 +/- .02) indicates that each of the three decay components can be analyzed as a separate rotational species, with the preexponential factor Ai equal to 1.25X the mole fraction. An empirically accurate measurement of the membrane lipid viscosity was obtained, permitting a theoretical analysis of the correlation times in terms of the sizes of the rotating species. At 4 degrees C, the dominant correlation time (phi 3) is too large for a Ca-ATPase monomer, strongly suggesting that the enzyme is primarily aggregated (oligomeric).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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