Picosecond-Resolved
Fluorescent Probes at Functionally
Distinct Tryptophans within a Thermophilic Alcohol Dehydrogenase:
Relationship of Temperature-Dependent Changes in Fluorescence to Catalysis
Two
single-tryptophan variants were generated in a thermophilic
alcohol dehydrogenase with the goal of correlating temperature-dependent
changes in local fluorescence with the previously demonstrated catalytic
break at ca. 30 °C (Kohen et al., <i>Nature</i> <b>1999</b>, <i>399</i>, 496). One tryptophan variant,
W87in, resides at the active site within van der Waals contact of
bound alcohol substrate; the other variant, W167in, is a remote-site
surface reporter located >25 Å from the active site. Picosecond-resolved
fluorescence measurements were used to analyze fluorescence lifetimes,
time-dependent Stokes shifts, and the extent of collisional quenching
at Trp87 and Trp167 as a function of temperature. A subnanosecond
fluorescence decay rate constant has been detected for W87in that
is ascribed to the proximity of the active site Zn<sup>2+</sup> and
shows a break in behavior at 30 °C. For the remainder of the
reported lifetime measurements, there is no detectable break between
10 and 50 °C, in contrast with previously reported hydrogen/deuterium
exchange experiments that revealed a temperature-dependent break analogous
to catalysis (Liang et al., <i>Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A</i>. <b>2004</b>, <i>101</i>, 9556). We conclude that
the motions that lead to the rigidification of ht-ADH below 30 °C
are likely to be dominated by global processes slower than the picosecond
to nanosecond motions measured herein. In the case of collisional
quenching of fluorescence by acrylamide, W87in and W167in behave in
a similar manner that resembles free tryptophan in water. Stokes shift
measurements, by contrast, show distinctive behaviors in which the
active-site tryptophan relaxation is highly temperature-dependent,
whereas the solvent-exposed tryptophan’s dynamics are temperature-independent.
These data are concluded to reflect a significantly constrained environment
surrounding the active site Trp87 that both increases the magnitude
of the Stokes shift and its temperature-dependence. The results are
discussed in the context of spatially distinct differences in enthalpic
barriers for protein conformational sampling that may be related to
catalysis