posted on 2017-10-15, 00:00authored byAnkur A. Awasthi, Prabhat K. Singh
Proton
transfer reactions on biosurfaces play an important role
in a myriad of biological processes. Herein, the excited-state proton
transfer reaction of 8-hydroxypyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonate (HPTS) has
been investigated in the presence of an important therapeutic protein,
Protamine (PrS), using ground-state absorption, steady-state, and
detailed time-resolved emission measurements. HPTS forms a 1:1 complex
with Protamine with a high association constant of 2.6 × 104 M–1. The binding of HPTS with Protamine
leads to a significant modulation in the ground-state prototropic
equilibrium causing a downward shift of 1.1 unit in the acidity constant
(pKa). In contrast to a large number of
reports of slow proton transfer of HPTS on biosurfaces, interestingly,
HPTS registers a faster proton transfer event in the presence of Protamine
as compared to that of even the bulk aqueous buffer medium. Furthermore,
the dimensionality
of the proton diffusion process is also significantly reduced on the
surface of Protamine that is in contrast to the behavior of HPTS in
the bulk aqueous buffer medium, where the proton diffusion process
is three-dimensional. The effect of ionic strength on the binding
of HPTS toward PrS suggests a predominant role of electrostatic interaction
between anionic HPTS and cationic Protamine, which is further supported
by molecular docking simulations which predict that the most preferable
binding site for HPTS on the surface of Protamine is surrounded by
multiple cationic arginine residues.