4.2 Article

Deciphering the binding behaviours of BSA using ionic AIE-active fluorescent probes

Journal

FARADAY DISCUSSIONS
Volume 196, Issue -, Pages 285-303

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6fd00165c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. key project of the Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2013CB834704]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [51573158]
  3. Research Grants Council of Hong Kong [16301614, N_HKUST604/14, N_HKUST620/11]
  4. Zhejiang Innovative Research Team Program [2013TD02]
  5. Guangdong Innovative Research Team Program [201101C0105067115]

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The binding behaviours of a transport protein, bovine serum albumin (BSA), in its native, unfolding and refolding states have been probed by monitoring the emission changes of two exogenous AIE-active fluorescent probes, M2 and M3, which are designed to be anionic and cationic, respectively. Due to their AIE properties, both M2 and M3 display emission enhancement when bound to the hydrophobic cavity of BSA. The binding site of M2 and M3 is found to be subdomain IIA. Then, the BSA + M2 and BSA + M3 systems are utilized to fluorescently signal the conformation changes of BSA caused by various external stimuli, including thermally or chemically induced denaturation. The data confirmed the multi-step unfolding process and the existence of a molten-globule intermediate state. The unfolding process consists of the rearrangement of subdomain IIA, the exposure of a negatively charged binding site in domain I that prefers interacting with cationic species, and the transformation of the molten-globule intermediate into the final random coil. The anionic and cationic modifications of the probes enable us to observe that electrostatic interactions play a role in the folding and unfolding of BSA.

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