Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.112, No.30, 9209-9218, 2008
Effect of side-chain length on the side-chain dynamics of alpha-helical poly(L-glutamic acid) as probed by a fluorescence blob model
Two series of pyrene-labeled poly(glutamic acid) (Py-PGA) were synthesized utilizing two different linkers for pyrene attachment, namely 1-pyrenemethylamine (PMA) and 1-pyrenebutylamine (PBA). Several Py-PGAs were synthesized for each series with pyrene contents ranging from 4 to 15 mol %. Py-PGA forms a rigid alpha-helix in DMF that effectively locks the backbone in place, thus enabling only side-chain or linker motions to be monitored by time-resolved fluorescence. Time-resolved fluorescence decays were acquired for the pyrene monomer of the Py-PGA constructs and the fluorescence blob model (FBM) was used to quantify the dynamics of the different linkers connecting pyrene to the backbone. Nitromethane was used to shorten the lifetime of the pyrene monomer, in effect controlling the probing time of the pyrene group, from 50 to 155 ns for PGA-PBA and from 50 to 215 ns for PGA-PMA. The FBM analysis of the fluorescence decays led to the conclusion that excimer formation around the rigid alpha-helix backbone takes place in a compact environment. The number of glutamic acid units within a blob, N-blob, decreased only slightly with decreasing probing time for both Py-PGA constructs as a result of the compact distribution of the chromophores around the alpha-helix. The PGA alpha-helix was modeled using Hyperchem software and the ability of two pyrene groups to encounter was evaluated as they were separated by increasing numbers of amino acids along the alpha-helix. The number of amino acids required for two pyrenes to lose their ability to overlap and form excimer matched closely the N-blob values retrieved using the FBM.