AbstractThe fluorescence decay of tryptophan is a sensitive indicator of its local environment within a peptide or protein. We describe the use of frequency domain fluorescence spectroscopy to determine the conformational and environmental changes associated with the interaction of single tryptophan amphipathic peptides with a phospholipid surface. The five 18-residue peptides studied are based on a class A amphipathic peptide known to associate with lipid bilayers. The peptides contain a single tryptophan located at positions 2, 3, 7, 12, or 14 in the sequence. In aqueous solution, the peptides are unstructured and a triple-exponential function is required to fit the decay data. Association of the peptides with small unilamellar vesicles c...
The fluorescence from tryptophan contains valuable information about the environment local to the in...
AbstractThe peptide bond quenches tryptophan fluorescence by excited-state electron transfer, which ...
The presence of tryptophan residues as intrinsic fluorophores in most proteins makes them an obvious...
AbstractThe fluorescence decay of tryptophan is a sensitive indicator of its local environment withi...
AbstractThe amphipathic helix plays a key role in many membrane-associating peptides and proteins. T...
Fluorescence spectroscopy is extensively used to monitor binding of peptides to lipid vesicles as we...
The fluorescence of a membrane-bound tryptophan derivative (tryptophan octyl ester, TOE) has been ex...
The presence of tryptophan residues as intrinsic fluorophores in most proteins makes them an obvious...
AbstractThe Dead-End Elimination method was used to identify 40 low energy microconformations of 16 ...
The relationship between alpha-helical secondary structure and the fluorescence properties of an int...
Amphiphilic peptides are capable of finding their way to, and occasionally through, cellular membran...
The decay of the tryptophanyl emission in proteins is often complex due to the sensitivity of the tr...
ABSTRACT The presence of tryptophan residues as intrinsic fluorophores in most proteins makes them a...
In our previous paper (Reshetnyak, Ya. K., and E. A. Burstein. 2001. Biophys. J. 81:1710–1734) we co...
AbstractIn our previous paper (Reshetnyak, Ya. K., and E. A. Burstein. 2001. Biophys. J. 81:1710–173...
The fluorescence from tryptophan contains valuable information about the environment local to the in...
AbstractThe peptide bond quenches tryptophan fluorescence by excited-state electron transfer, which ...
The presence of tryptophan residues as intrinsic fluorophores in most proteins makes them an obvious...
AbstractThe fluorescence decay of tryptophan is a sensitive indicator of its local environment withi...
AbstractThe amphipathic helix plays a key role in many membrane-associating peptides and proteins. T...
Fluorescence spectroscopy is extensively used to monitor binding of peptides to lipid vesicles as we...
The fluorescence of a membrane-bound tryptophan derivative (tryptophan octyl ester, TOE) has been ex...
The presence of tryptophan residues as intrinsic fluorophores in most proteins makes them an obvious...
AbstractThe Dead-End Elimination method was used to identify 40 low energy microconformations of 16 ...
The relationship between alpha-helical secondary structure and the fluorescence properties of an int...
Amphiphilic peptides are capable of finding their way to, and occasionally through, cellular membran...
The decay of the tryptophanyl emission in proteins is often complex due to the sensitivity of the tr...
ABSTRACT The presence of tryptophan residues as intrinsic fluorophores in most proteins makes them a...
In our previous paper (Reshetnyak, Ya. K., and E. A. Burstein. 2001. Biophys. J. 81:1710–1734) we co...
AbstractIn our previous paper (Reshetnyak, Ya. K., and E. A. Burstein. 2001. Biophys. J. 81:1710–173...
The fluorescence from tryptophan contains valuable information about the environment local to the in...
AbstractThe peptide bond quenches tryptophan fluorescence by excited-state electron transfer, which ...
The presence of tryptophan residues as intrinsic fluorophores in most proteins makes them an obvious...