A molecular dynamics simulation approach has been
utilized to understand the unusual fluorescence emission
decay observed for β-glycosidase from the hyperthermophilic
bacterium Solfolobus sulfataricus (Sβgly),
a tetrameric enzyme containing 17 tryptophanyl residues
for each subunit. The tryptophanyl emission decay of Sβgly
results from a bimodal distribution of fluorescence lifetimes
with a short-lived component centered at 2.5 ns and a long-lived
one at 7.4 ns (Bismuto E, Nucci R, Rossi M, Irace G, 1999,
Proteins 27:71–79). From the examination
of the trajectories of the side chains capable of causing
intramolecular quenching for each tryptophan microenvironment
and using a modified Stern–Volmer model for the emission
quenching processes, we calculated the fluorescence lifetime
for each tryptophanyl residue of Sβgly at two different
temperatures, i.e., 300 and 365 K. The highest temperature
was chosen because in this condition Sβlgy evidences
a maximum in its catalytic activity and is stable for a
very long time. The calculated lifetime distributions overlap
those experimentally determined. Moreover, the majority
of trytptophanyl residues having longer lifetimes correspond
to those originally identified by inspection of the crystallographic
structure. The tryptophanyl lifetimes appear to be a complex
function of several variables, such as microenvironment
viscosity, solvent accessibility, the chemical structure
of quencher side chains, and side-chain dynamics. The lifetime
calculation by MD simulation can be used to validate a
predicted structure by comparing the theoretical data with
the experimental fluorescence decay results.