Iodide fluorescence quenching of sol-gel immobilized BSA
β Scribed by Carol L. Wambolt; S. Scott Saavedra
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 432 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0928-0707
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β¦ Synopsis
Several potential applications of sol-gel immobilized proteins may require drying the gel before use. The attendant shrinkage may sterically restrict the penetration of solutes to the entrapped protein. In this study, collisional quenching of intrinsic bovine serum albumin (BSA) fluorescence by dissolved iodide was used to quantitatively compare the accessibility of protein molecules entrapped in hydrated and dried sol-gel monoliths. The results show that iodide penetration to immobilized BSA is sterically restricted by approximately 25% in hydrated gels and 50% in dried gels, relative to the quenching behavior of dissolved BSA. The further decrease upon drying is consistent with the overall degree of monolith shrinkage.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Fluorescence quenching of anthracene by iodide ions in ethanol and propanol solutions in the temperature range 293-333 K was investigated under stationary conditions. The fluorescence quenching can be satisfactorily described using Marcus-type theory. Analysis of the experimental data indicates the