Single tryptophan-containing mutants of low adenylylation state Escherichia coli glutamine synthetase have been studied by frequency-domain fluorescence spectroscopy in the presence of various substrates and inhibitors. At pH 6.5, the Mn-bound wild-type enzyme (wild type has two tryptophans/subunit) and the mutant enzymes exhibit heterogeneous fluorescence decay kinetics; the individual tryptophans are adequately described by a triple exponential decay scheme. The recovered lifetime values are 5.9 ns, 2.6 ns, and 0.4 ns for Trp-57 and 5.8 ns, 2.3 ns, and 0.4 ns for Trp-158. These values are nearly identical to the previously reported results at pH 7.5 (Atkins, W.M., Stayton, P.S., & Villafranca, J.J., 1991, Biochemistry30,3406-3416). In addition, Trp-57 and Trp-158 both exhibit an ATP-induced increase in the relative fraction of the long lifetime component, whereas only Trp-57 is affected by this ligand at pH 7.5. The transition-state analogue L-methionine-(R,S)-sulfoximine (MSOX) causes a dramatic increase in the fractional intensity of the long lifetime component of Trp-158. This ligand has no effect on the W158S mutant protein and causes a small increase in the fractional intensity of the long lifetime component of the W158F mutant protein. Addition of glutamate to the ATP complex, which affords the yglutamylphosphate-ADP complex, results in the presence of new lifetime components at 7, 3.2, and 0.5 ns for Trp-158, but has no effect on Trp-57. Similar results were obtained when ATP was added to the MSOX complex; Trp-57 exhibits heterogeneous fluorescence decay with lifetimes of 7, 3.5, and 0.8 ns. Decay kinetics of Trp-158 are best fit to a nearly homogeneous decay with a lifetime of 5.5 ns in the MSOX-ATP inactivated complex. These results provide a model for the sequence of structural and dynamic changes that take place at the Trp-57 loop and the central loop (Trp-158) during several intermediate stages of catalysis.Keywords: Escherichia coli; fluorescence studies; glutamine synthetase; transition-state complexes; tryptophan mutants Glutamine synthetase (GS) plays a central role in the nitrogen metabolism of both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, catalyzing the ATP-dependent condensation of glutamate with ammonia to form glutamine (Ginsburg, 1972;Stadtman & Ginsburg, 1974). The bacterial enzymes consist of a highly symmetrical dodecamer formed by two face-toReprint requests to: Joseph J. Villafranca, Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802.Abbreviations: W57L, the site-directed mutant that has Trp-57 replaced by leucine; W158S or WlSSF, the site-directed mutants that have Trp-158 replaced by serine or phenylalanine; glutamylphosphate-ADP-GS, the ternary complex formed after the addition of ATP and glutamate to glutamine synthetase.