Abstract

The CaATPase of rabbit skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum was labeled at or near the ATP catalytic site with fluoresceinyl isothiocyanate (FITC), and the accessibility of the attached probe to the bulk solvent was determined by I- quenching of its fluorescence. The quenching of free FITC was also measured. In both cases, the quenching was of the Stern-Volmer type and collisional quenching rate constants were obtained over the pH range 5-8 in the presence of ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid and with added Ca2+, vanadate, or phosphate. The fluorescence intensity and susceptibility to quenching by I- of free FITC were insensitive to the added ligands. In all cases, the intensity decreased with pH, as predicted from the known properties of FITC mono- and dianions. The collisional quenching rate constants increased at lower pH, as expected for I- quenching of a molecule with decreasing negative charge due to protonation. When FITC was attached to the CaATPase, the FITC fluorescence intensity and I- collisional quenching rate constants were sensitive to ligand binding as well as pH. The changes in fluorescence intensity with acidity, when compared to the results for free FITC, indicated the pKa of the FITC was reduced 0.6 unit when it was attached to the CaATPase. Excited-state lifetime measurements indicated that ligand effects at constant pH were not due to protonation-induced changes in FITC quantum yield but to conformational changes of the CaATPase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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