4.1 Article

Detection of charge movements in ion pumps by a family of styryl dyes

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE BIOLOGY
Volume 185, Issue 3, Pages 221-236

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00232-001-0125-y

Keywords

P-type ATPases; ion binding sites; electrochromic effects; styryl dyes; fluorescence; partial reactions

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A family of fluorescent styryl dyes was synthesized to apply them as probes that monitor the ion-translocating activity of the Na,K-ATPase and the SR Ca-ATPase, similar to the widely used dye RH421. All dyes had the same chromophore but they differed in the length of the spacer between chromophore and polar head, an isothiocyanate group, and in the lengths of the two identical acyl chains, which form the tail of the dye molecules. A number of substrate-dependent partial reactions of both P-type ATPases affected the fluorescence intensity, and the magnitude of the fluorescence changes was used to characterize the usefulness of the dyes for further application. The experimental results indicate that electrochromy is the major mechanism of these dyes. While in the case of the Na,K-ATPase a single dye, 5QITC, showed larger fluorescence changes than all others, in the case of the SR Ca-ATPase all dyes tested were almost equal in their fluorescence responses. This prominent difference is interpreted as a hint that the position of the ion binding sites in both ion pumps may differ significantly despite their otherwise closely related structural features. Quench experiments with spin-labeled lipids in various positions of their fatty acids were used to gain information on the depth of the chromophore of the different dyes within the membrane dielectric, however, the spatial resolution was so poor that only qualitative information on the position of the chromophore in the lipid phase could be obtained.

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