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Time-resolved Tryptophan Fluorescence Anisotropy Investigation of Bacteriophage M13 Coat Protein in Micelles and Mixed Bilayers

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Journal Biochemistry
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1987 Sep 22
PMID 3318926
Citations 7
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Abstract

Coat protein of bacteriophage M13 is examined in micelles and vesicles by time-resolved tryptophan fluorescence and anisotropy decay measurements and circular dichroism experiments. Circular dichroism indicates that the coat protein has alpha-helix (60%) and beta-structure (28%) in 700 mM sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles and predominantly beta-structure (94%) in mixed dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine/dimyristoylphosphatidic acid (80/20 w/w) small unilamellar vesicles. The fluorescence decay at 344 nm of the single tryptophan in the coat protein after excitation at 295 or 300 nm is a triple exponential. In the micelles the anisotropy decay is a double exponential. A short, temperature-independent correlation time of 0.5 +/- 0.2 ns reflects a rapid depolarization process within the coat protein. The overall rotation of the coat protein-detergent complex is observed in the decay as a longer correlation time of 9.8 +/- 0.5 ns (at 20 degrees C) and has a temperature dependence that satisfies the Stokes-Einstein relation. In vesicles at all lipid to protein molar ratios in the range from 20 to 410, the calculated order parameter is constant with a value of 0.7 +/- 0.1 from 10 to 40 degrees C, although the lipids undergo the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition. The longer correlation time decreases gradually on increasing temperature. This effect probably arises from an increasing segmental mobility within the coat protein. The results are consistent with a model in which the coat protein has a beta-structure and the tryptophan indole rings do not experience the motion of the lipids in the bilayer because of protein-protein aggregation.

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