Holowka D, Wensel T, Baird B
Department of Chemistry, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853.
Biochemistry. 1990 May 15;29(19):4607-12. doi: 10.1021/bi00471a015.
Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements have been used to examine the segmental flexibility of anti-dansyl immunoglobulin E (IgE) bound to its high-affinity receptor on membrane vesicles from rat basophilic leukemia cells. Although IgE in this complex exhibits only a restricted angular range of segmental motion, much of this restricted motion occurs on a relatively rapid time scale. A fast component of motion with a rotational correlation time of 15-35 ns may correspond to the twisting of Fab segments about their major axis. Intermolecular cross-linking by a short bivalent ligand, N,N'-didansylcadaverine, results in complete loss of this segmental motion. Solubilization of monomeric IgE-receptor complexes using a zwitterionic detergent results in a time-dependent anisotropy decay that exhibits both a fast component and a slower component that is intermediate between the decay for soluble and membrane-bound forms of IgE at long times after excitation. These results are discussed in terms of a model in which binding of IgE to its membrane-bound receptor restricts not only its global rotation but also its slower modes of segmental flexibility as well, while allowing its Fab segments to undergo rapid reorientation within a limited angular range.