Abstract

The carboxy-terminal tryptophan of putidaredoxin, the Fe2S2.Cys4 iron-sulfur physiological redox partner of cytochrome P-450cam, is essential for maximal biological activity [Davies, M. D., Qin, L., Beck, J. L., Suslick, K. S., Koga, H., Horiuchi, T., & Sligar, S. G. (1990) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 112, 7396-7398]. This single tryptophan-containing protein thus represents an excellent system for studying the solution dynamics of a residue directly implicated in an electron-transfer pathway. Steady-state and time-resolved measurements of the tryptophan fluorescence have been conducted across the emission spectrum as a function of redox state to probe potential structural changes which might be candidates for structural gating phenomena. The steady-state emission spectrum (lambda max = 358 nm) and anisotropy (alpha = 0.04) suggest that Trp-106 is very solvent-exposed and rotating partially free of global protein constraints. The time-resolved fluorescence kinetics for both oxidized and reduced putidaredoxin are fit best with three discrete components of approximately 5, 2, and 0.3 ns. The lifetime components were assigned to physical species with iodide ion quenching experiments, where differential quenching of the longer components was observed (k tau = 2 = 5.9 X 10(8) M-1 s-1, k tau = 5 = 1.3 X 10(8) M-1 s-1). These findings suggest that the multiexponential fluorescence decay results from ground-state conformational microheterogeneity and thus demonstrate that the essential tryptophan exists in at least two distinguishable conformations. Small differences in the relative proportions of the components between redox states were observed but not cleanly resolved.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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