Ionization of the phenolic group of N-acetyltyrosynamide has been studied using secondderivative spectroscopy. At pH 12.5 the second-derivative spectrum of the model compound revealed the presence of derivative bands in a spectral region (between 250 and 270 nm) where interference coming from other
Quantitative determination of tryptophanyl and tyrosyl residues of proteins by second-derivative fluorescence spectroscopy
โ Scribed by J.C. Garcia-Borron; J. Escribano; M. Jimenez; J.L. Iborra
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 742 KB
- Volume
- 125
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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โฆ Synopsis
Second-derivative spectroscopy has been applied to the study of the fluorescence of aromatic amino acids. The spectral features of the second derivative emission spectra of free aromatic amino acids and proteins are described, the emission of each aromatic fluorophore being characterized by a particular minimum-maximum pair. An easy, accurate, and rapid method is proposed for the quantitative determination of tyrosine and tryptophan, based on the addition of small amounts of a standard solution to the samples followed by the measurement of the increase in the distance between a selected minimum and an adjacent maximum, in the secondderivative spectrum. For tyrosine determination, excitation wavelength was 275 nm, and the selected minimum-maximum (m,M) pair was (300; 330 rim), while an excitation of 300 nm and a minimum-maximum pair (357; 377 nm) were employed for the tryptophan determination. This method enables the ttyptophan content of proteins to be determined directly, without the need for correction for the presence of tyrosine. The tyrosine content of proteins can also be determined at neutral pH, in the presence of both tryptophan and phenylalanine. The proposed method has also been applied to trypsin activation of frog epidermis tyrosinase.
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The mutual interference between the second-derivative bands of tyrosine and tryptophan in proteins has been evaluated in terms of the ratio r between two peak-to-peak distances. The r values have been found to be well related, although not linearly, to the tyrosine/ tryptophan ratio in both model co
A method for deconvolution of the near-uv second-derivative spectra of proteins into their component tryptophan, tyrosine, and phenylalanine spectra is described. In this approach, the second-derivative spectra of tryptophan and tyrosine model compounds are numerically shifted to create a set of ref