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  • Photogeneration and Quenchi...
    Larson, Bethany C; Pomponio, Jennifer R; Shafaat, Hannah S; Kim, Rachel H; Leigh, Brian S; Tauber, Michael J; Kim, Judy E

    The journal of physical chemistry. B, 07/2015, Letnik: 119, Številka: 29
    Journal Article

    Tryptophan and tyrosine can form radical intermediates that enable long-range, multistep electron transfer (ET) reactions in proteins. This report describes the mechanisms of formation and quenching of a neutral tryptophan radical in azurin, a blue-copper protein that contains native tyrosine (Y108 and Y72) and tryptophan (W48) residues. A long-lived neutral tryptophan radical W48• is formed upon UV-photoexcitation of a zinc­(II)-substituted azurin mutant in the presence of an external electron acceptor. The quantum yield of W48• formation (Φ) depends upon the tyrosine residues in the protein. A tyrosine-deficient mutant, ZnIIAz48W, exhibited a value of Φ = 0.080 with a Co­(III) electron acceptor. A nearly identical quantum yield was observed when the electron acceptor was the analogous tyrosine-free, copper­(II) mutant; this result for the ZnIIAz48W:CuIIAz48W mixture suggests there is an interprotein ET path. A single tyrosine residue at one of the native positions reduced the quantum yield to 0.062 (Y108) or 0.067 (Y72). Wild-type azurin with two tyrosine residues exhibited a quantum yield of Φ = 0.045. These data indicate that tyrosine is able to quench the tryptophan radical in azurin.