Dependence of Tryptophan Emission Wavelength on Conformation in Cyclic Hexapeptides

Abstract
The wavelength of maximum emission of tryptophan depends on the local electrostatic environment of the indole chromophore. The time-resolved emission spectra of seven rigid cyclic hexapeptides containing a single tryptophan residue were measured. The emission maxima of the three decay-associated spectra for the seven peptides ranged from 341 to 359 nm, suggesting that different tryptophan rotamers have different emission maxima even in the case of solvent-exposed tryptophans. This conclusion is supported by quantum mechanical/molecular dynamics simulations of the six canonical side chain rotamers of tryptophan in solvated hexapeptides. The calculated range of emission maxima for the tryptophan rotamers of the seven peptides is 344−365 nm. The precision of the wavelength calculations and the peptide, water, and charged side chain contributions to the spectral shifts are examined. The results indicate that the emission maxima of decay-associated spectra can aid in the assignment of fluorescence lifetimes to tryptophan rotamers.