| Literature DB >> 6290209 |
B P Dixit, A J Waring, K O Wells, P S Wong, G V Woodrow, J M Vanderkooi.
Abstract
Molecular motion of metal-free and metal-substituted cytochrome c derivatives was examined using the anisotropy of emissions from the singlet and the triplet states. The anisotropy of fluorescence provides a means to study the motion of cytochrome c in the nanosecond time scale, since the fluorescence lifetime of metal-free cytochrome c is around 10 ns. We find that the anisotropy of fluorescence of metal-free cytochrome c when bound to mitochondria does not decay, but when bound to phospholipids has a small component which decays independently of the rotation of the whole molecule. The use of phosphorescence extends the time scale for study into the millisecond regime, since the lifetime of the excited triplet state of zinc cytochrome c, as measured by triplet-triplet absorption and phosphorescence emission is approximately equal to 9 ms for free zinc cytochrome c and 7 ms for mitochondrial membrane-bound zinc cytochrome c at room temperature. The decay of anisotropy of phosphorescence emission of mitochondrial membrane-bound zinc cytochrome c is clearly biphasic; the fast component corresponds to a rotational relaxation time of 300 mus and the slow component with relaxation time of approximately equal to 6 ms. The slow component appears to be due to the rotation of the entire mitochondrion, whereas the fast component was interpreted to be due to the rotation of cytochrome c in a cone about a single axis perpendicular to the plane of the membrane surface.Entities:
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Year: 1982 PMID: 6290209 DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1982.tb06737.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Biochem ISSN: 0014-2956