J. Jordan, R. A. Dunbar, F. Bright
Jul 15, 1995
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Journal
Analytical chemistry
Abstract
We investigate acrylodan-labeled bovine and human serum albumin (BSA-Ac and HSA-Ac) entrapped within a tetramethylorthosilane-derived biogel composite. The effects of biogel aging and drying were studied by following the acrylodan steady-state and time-resolved emission, the decay of anisotropy, and the dipolar relaxation kinetics as a function of ambient storage time. The results indicate that there is a substantial amount of nanosecond and subnanosecond dipolar relaxation within the local environment surrounding cysteine-34 in both proteins, even when they are fully encapsulated in a dry biogel. Time-resolved anisotropy experiments show that the acrylodan residue and the protein are able to undergo nanosecond motion within the biogel. The semiangle through which the acrylodan can process is the same for a freshly formed biogel and the native protein in buffer. However, once the biogel begins to dry, the semiangle increases (approximately 20 degrees and 10 degrees for BSA-Ac and HSA-Ac, respectively). This suggests that the "pocket" hosting the acrylodan reporter group opens as the biogel dries.