Chemistry. The motions of an enzyme soloist
- PMID: 14551425
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1090850
Chemistry. The motions of an enzyme soloist
Abstract
Dynamics of proteins are crucial to their function. In his Perspective, Orrit stresses the advantages of studying these dynamics with single-molecule methods--which require no synchronization--rather than with conventional ensemble measurements. He highlights the report by Yang et al., who follow the fluorescence of a single enzyme molecule. Electron transfer from the fluorophore to a quencher induces fluctuations of the fluorescence lifetime along with the fluorophore-quencher distance. The wide range of characteristic times of those fluctuations reveals the complexity of the protein's potential energy landscape. As a new molecular ruler, electron transfer complements other single-molecule methods such as energy transfer (FRET) for distances shorter than a few nanometers.
Comment on
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Protein conformational dynamics probed by single-molecule electron transfer.Science. 2003 Oct 10;302(5643):262-6. doi: 10.1126/science.1086911. Science. 2003. PMID: 14551431
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