A fluorescent phospholipid derivative, the fluoresceinthiocarbamyl adduct of a natural phosphatidylethanolamine, has been synthesized and incorporated into sonicated single-bilayer vesicles of egg lecithin and dipalmitoyllecithin. The surface location of this probe has been confirmed by using extrinsic fluorescence quenching studies together with steady-state emission anisotropy measurements. Electronic excitation energy transfer between 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene incorporated within the hydrophobic core of the bilayer and the novel derivative has been investigated to estimate the depth within the bilayer at which the former is located. Efficiencies have been measured for two different phospholipids, egg lecithin and dipalmitoyllecithin, in the latter case both above and below the phospholipid phase transition, with and without added cholesterol. The observed dependence of the transfer efficiency on the acceptor concentration was compared with that calculated according to Förster theory applied to random two-dimensional distributions of donor and acceptor molecules in parallel planes for various interplanar separations, taking into account orientational effects. The Förster R0 of about 45 A for this donor-acceptor pair is particularly well suited to such studies since it is of the order of the width of the bilayer. The experiments showed that energy-transfer spectroscopy can provide useful quantitative information as to the transverse location of diphenylhexatriene in homogeneous phospholipid bilayers and may also reflect lateral partitioning of donor or of both donor and acceptor into different phases in systems exhibiting phase separations.
The pH dependence of singlet oxygen quenching by histidine, N-acetyltyrosine ethyl ester (ATEE), ascorbic
acid, Trolox C, and tryptophan has been observed using time-resolved infrared luminescence measurements
in a D2O/acetonitrile (50:50 v/v) solvent. Deprotonation of ascorbic acid, the protonated imidazole ring of
histidine and the phenolic group of ATEE leads to an increase in the quenching rate constants by between 2
and 3 orders of magnitude. Such changes appear to be the basis for wide variations in quoted literature values
of singlet oxygen quenching constants for these and related compounds. It is estimated that these pH-dependent
quenching rate constants predict a modest (approximately 2- to 3-fold) change in singlet oxygen lifetime
between the extremes of cellular pH. Activation data for singlet oxygen quenching show that the enthalpies
of activation are low in all cases (between 0 and 11 kJ mol-1) and that substantially negative entropies of
activation (between −49 and −116 J K-1 mol-1) result in rate constants being much lower than the diffusion-controlled limit. In all cases the data are consistent with quenching via reversible formation of an exciplex,
all reactions being at the preequilibrium limit over the available temperature range.
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