Publication | Open Access
Long-range electron exchange measured in proteins by quenching of tryptophan phosphorescence.
48
Citations
24
References
1990
Year
Molecular BiologyAnalytical UltracentrifugationTryptophan BurialRedox BiologySingle Molecule BiophysicsPhosphorescence ImagingProtein FoldingBuried TryptophansStructure-function Enzyme KineticsBiophysicsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryGeneral Protein MatrixBiomolecular InteractionLong-range Electron ExchangeNatural SciencesQuantum BiologyTryptophan PhosphorescenceMedicine
Ten proteins that span a wide range of phosphorescence lifetimes were examined for sensitivity to quenching by four agents of disparate chemical nature. The results show that quenching efficiency is relatively independent of the quencher and is highly correlated with depth of burial of the phosphorescent tryptophan. The bimolecular quenching rate constants (kq) measured for the different proteins, spanning 5 orders of magnitude in kq, are found to decrease exponentially with the distance (r) of the tryptophan in angstroms from the protein surface--i.e., kq = Aexp(-r/rho), where A contains a geometrical factor dependent on tryptophan burial and surface geometry [corrected]. Theoretical analysis shows that this behavior can be expected for an electron-exchange reaction between the buried tryptophans and quenchers in solution in the rapid diffusion limit. Therefore, the results obtained provide evidence for an exponential dependence of electron-transfer rate on distance in a protein environment and evaluate the distance parameter, rho, for electron transfer through the general protein matrix at 1.0 A. For a unimolecular donor-acceptor pair with ket = koexp(-r/rho), ko approximately 10(9) sec-1.
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