Biochemical Journal 1991-02-15

The lobster carapace carotenoprotein, alpha-crustacyanin. A possible role for tryptophan in the bathochromic spectral shift of protein-bound astaxanthin.

P F Zagalsky, E E Eliopoulos, J B Findlay

Index: Biochem. J. 274 ( Pt 1) , 79-83, (1991)

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Abstract

Crustacyanin, cross-linked with dimethyl pimelimidate to stabilize the protein against denaturation, was used to test the effects of tryptophan modification with BNPS-skatole [3-bromo-3-methyl-2-(nitrophenylmercaptol)-3H-indole] on the ability of the apoprotein to recombine with astaxanthin. The cross-linked apoprotein re-forms alpha-crustacyanin with astaxanthin in reasonable yield following incubation of the protein under the conditions for tryptophan modification in the absence of BNPS-skatole. The BNPS-skatole-treated protein reconstitutes with astaxanthin to give a carotenoprotein with lambda max. at 472 nm, that of the carotenoid in hexane, in a yield similar to that of the BNPS-skatole-untreated control. The implied involvement of tryptophan residues at the sites of astaxanthin attachment in crustacyanin and their possible roles in the binding sites of vitamin A in vitamin A-proteins are discussed in relation to the bathochromic spectral shifts of the chromophores.

Related Compounds

Structure Name/CAS No. Articles
BNPS-SKATOLE Structure BNPS-SKATOLE
CAS:27933-36-4