Abstract

The aim of this study was to demonstrate the utility of time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy in the detection of subtle changes in the local microenvironment of a tryptophan chromophore in a confined and crowded medium of AOT reverse micelles, which mimic biological membranes and cell compartmentalization. For this purpose, fluorescence properties of L-tryptophan and several newly synthesized tryptophan-containing peptides in buffer and in an AOT reverse micelle medium were determined. It was shown that insertion of tryptophan and its short di- and tripeptides inside micelles led to evident changes in both the steady-state emission spectra and in fluorescence decay kinetics. The observed differences in spectral characteristics, such as a blue shift in the emission maxima, changes in the average fluorescence lifetime, and the appearance of environmental-dependent fluorescent species, showed the utility of time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy as a sensitive tool for detecting subtle conformational modifications in tryptophan and its peptides induced by changes in polarity, viscosity, and specific interactions between chromophores and water molecules/polar groups/ions that occur inside reverse micelles.

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