Rotational diffusion of calcium-dependent adenosine-5'-triphosphatase in sarcoplasmic reticulum: a detailed study.
Restall, C J ; Dale, Robert E ; Murray, E K ; Gilbert, Charles W ; Chapman, D
Restall, C J
Dale, Robert E
Murray, E K
Gilbert, Charles W
Chapman, D
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Abstract
The Ca2+-Mg2+ adenosine-5'-triphosphatase (ATPase) in sarcoplasmic reticulum has been covalently labeled with the phosphorescent triplet probe erythrosinyl 5-isothiocyanate. The rotational diffusion of the protein in the membrane at 25 degrees C was examined by measuring the time dependence of the phosphorescence emission anisotropy. Detailed analysis of both the total emission S(t) = Iv(t) + 2IH(t) and anisotropy R(t) = [Iv(t) - IH(t)]/[Iv(t) + 2IH(t)] curves shows the presence of multiple components. The latter is incompatible with a simple model of protein movement. The experimental data are consistent with a model in which the sum of four exponential components defines the phosphorescence decay. The anisotropy decay corresponds to a model in which the phosphor itself or a small phosphor-bearing segment reorients on a sub-microsecond time scale about an axis attached to a larger segment, which in turn reorients on a time scale of a few microseconds about an axis fixed in the frame of the ATPase. A fraction of the protein molecules rotate on a time scale of 100-200 microseconds about the normal to the bilayer, while the rest are rotationally stationary, at least on a sub-millisecond time scale.
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1984-12-18
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Rotational diffusion of calcium-dependent adenosine-5'-triphosphatase in sarcoplasmic reticulum: a detailed study. 1984, 23 (26):6765-76 Biochemistry