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Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.124, No.44, 13329-13338, 2002
Fluorescence of cis-l-amino-2-(3-indolyl)cyclohexane-l-carboxylic acid: A single tryptophan chi(1) rotamer model
A constrained derivative, cis-1-amino-2-(3-indolyl)cyclohexane-1-carboxylic acid, cis-W3, was designed to test the rotamer model of tryptophan photophysics. The conformational constraint enforces a single chi(1) conformation, analogous to the chi(1) = 60degrees rotamer of tryptophan. The side-chain torsion angles in the X-ray structure of cis-W3 were chi(1) = 58.5degrees and chi(2) = -88.7degrees. Molecular mechanics calculations suggested two chi(2) rotamers; for cis-W3 in solution, -100degrees and 80degrees, analogous to the chi(2) = +/-90degrees rotamers of tryptophan. The fluorescence decay of the cis-W3 zwitterion was biexponential with lifetimes of 3.1 and 0.3 ns at 25 degreesC. The relative amplitudes of the lifetime components match the chi(2) rotamer populations predicted by molecular mechanics. The longer lifetime represents the major chi(2) = -100degrees rotamer. The shorter lifetime represents the minor chi(2) = 80degrees rotamer having the ammonium group closer to C4 of the indole ring (labeled C5 in the cis-W3 X-ray structure). Intramolecular excited-state proton transfer occurs at indole C4 in the tryptophan zwitterion (Saito, I.; Sugiyama, H.; Yamamoto, A.; Muramatsu, S.; Matsuura,T. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1984, 106, 4286-4287). Photochemical isotope exchange experiments showed that H-D exchange occurs exclusively at C5 in the cis-W3 zwitterion, consistent with the presence of the chi(2) = 80degrees rotamer in solution. The rates of two nonradiative processes, excited-state proton and electron transfer, were measured for individual chi(2) rotamers. The excited-state proton-transfer rate was determined from H-D exchange and fluorescence lifetime data. The excited-state electron-transfer rate was determined from the temperature dependence of the fluorescence lifetime. The major quenching process in the -100degrees rotamer is electron transfer from the excited indole to carboxylate. Electron transfer also occurs in the 80degrees rotamer, but the major quenching process is intramolecular proton transfer. Both quenching processes are suppressed by deprotonation of the amino group. The results for cis-W3 provide compelling evidence that the complex fluorescence decay of the tryptophan zwitterion originates in ground-state heterogeneity with the different lifetimes primarily reflecting different intramolecular excited-state proton- and electron-transfer rates in various rotamers.