Jd. Brennan et al., Probing the origins of spectroscopic responses to analyte-induced conformational changes in fluorescently-labeled cod III parvalbumin, J PHYS CH B, 104(43), 2000, pp. 10100-10110
An emerging strategy for the development of reagentless biosensors is the c
oupling of fluorescence responses to analyte-induced conformational changes
within fluorescently-labeled proteins. In this work, we have examined the
absorbance and the steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence responses to
Ca2+-induced conformational changes within cod III parvalbumin (C3P), whic
h was labeled at cysteine-18 with the fluorescent probes fluorescein, acryl
odan or nitrobenzoxadiazole (NBD). The basis of the analyte-induced respons
es was further characterized by examining reporter group accessibility and
rotational reorientation dynamics in the presence and absence of analyte, W
e show that the fluorescence responses are often based on a combination of
direct and indirect effects, and that changes in fluorescence quantum yield
can be reinforced or opposed by simultaneous changes in absorbance, dramat
ically affecting the sensitivity of the observed signal to analyte concentr
ation. Tn the case of NBD, the response is fully consistent with an increas
e in the nonradiative rate constant owing to increased exposure of the repo
rter group to solvent as a result of the analyte-induced conformational cha
nge. However, in the case of acrylodan and fluorescein, the response reflec
ts a specific interaction between the probe and either the added Ca2+ or th
e amino acid residues in the vicinity of Cys-18, which changes in response
to protein conformation. Overall, the best performance is obtained From the
NBD-labeled C3P, where a signal change of almost 50% was obtained upon com
plete binding of Ca2+, providing a detection limit of 100 nM, a dynamic ran
ge of 2 orders of magnitude. The other two probes produced poor responses (
<10% total change in intensity on binding Ca2+), highlighting the difficult
y associated with predicting the behavior of a labeled protein, and showing
the complexity that exists at present in the design of sensitive biosensor
s based on labeled regulatory proteins.