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Picosecond-resolved fluorescence studies of substrate and cofactor-binding domain mutants in a thermophilic alcohol dehydrogenase uncover an extended network of communication
- Source :
- Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol 136, iss 42, Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- eScholarship, University of California, 2014.
-
Abstract
- Time-resolved fluorescence dynamics are investigated in two mutants of a thermophilic alcohol dehydrogenase (ht-ADH): Y25A (at the dimer interface) and V260A (at the cofactor-binding domain). These residues, ca. 32 A apart, are shown to exhibit opposing low-temperature effects on the hydride tunneling step. Using single-tryptophan constructs at the active site (Trp87) and a remote, surface-exposed site (Trp167), time-dependent Stokes shifts and collisional quenching data allow an analysis of intra-protein dynamical communication. A double mutant, Y25A:V260A, was also inserted into each single-Trp construct and analyzed accordingly. None of the mutations affect fluorescence lifetimes, Stokes shift relaxation rates, and quenching data for the surface-exposed Trp167 to an appreciable extent. By contrast, fluorescent probes of the active-site tryptophan 87 reveal distinctive forms of dynamical communication. Stokes shifts show that the distal Y25A increases active-site flexibility, V260A introduces a temperature-dependent equilibration process not previously reported by such measurements, and the double mutant (Y25A:V260A) eliminates the temperature-dependent transition sensed by the active-site tryptophan in the presence of V260A. Collisional quenching data at Trp87 further show a structural change in the active-site environment/solvation for V260A. In the aggregate, the temperature dependencies of the fluorescence data are distinct from the breaks in behavior previously reported for catalysis and hydrogen/deuterium exchange, attributed to time scales for the interconversion of protein conformational substates that are slower and more global than the local motions monitored within. An extended network of dynamical communication between the protein dimer surface and substrate- and cofactor-binding domains emerges from the flourescent data.
- Subjects :
- Models, Molecular
Protein Structure
Stereochemistry
Dimer
Coenzymes
Protein dimer
Biochemistry
Catalysis
Article
Fluorescence
Quaternary
Geobacillus stearothermophilus
chemistry.chemical_compound
symbols.namesake
Colloid and Surface Chemistry
Protein structure
Models
Stokes shift
Site-Directed
Protein Structure, Quaternary
Cofactor binding
Quenching (fluorescence)
biology
Spectrometry
Alcohol Dehydrogenase
Temperature
Substance Abuse
Active site
Molecular
General Chemistry
Kinetics
Spectrometry, Fluorescence
chemistry
Chemical physics
Mutagenesis
Mutation
Chemical Sciences
biology.protein
symbols
Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
Mutant Proteins
Protein Multimerization
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol 136, iss 42, Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a6e555b2a5cd564063b54995f23bfc4d