The Q7K/L33I/L63I HIV-1 protease mutant was expressed in
Escherichia coli and the effect of binding a substrate-analog
inhibitor, acetyl-pepstatin, was investigated by fluorescence
spectroscopy and molecular dynamics. The dimeric enzyme
has four intrinsic tryptophans, located at positions 6
and 42 in each monomer. Fluorescence spectra and acrylamide
quenching experiments show two differently accessible Trp
populations in the apoenzyme with kq1
= 6.85 × 109 M−1 s−1
and kq2 = 1.88 × 109
M−1 s−1, that merge into
one in the complex with kq = 1.78 ×
109 M−1 s−1.
500 ps trajectory analysis of Trp χ1/χ2
rotameric interconversions suggest a model to account for
the observed Trp fluorescence. In the simulations, Trp6/Trp6B
rotameric interconversions do not occur on this timescale
for both HIV forms. In the apoenzyme simulations, however, both Trp42s
and Trp42Bs are flipping between χ1/χ2
states; in the complexed form, no such interconverions
occur. A detailed investigation of the local Trp environments
sampled during the molecular dynamics simulation suggests
that one of the apoenzyme Trp42B rotameric interconversions
would allow indole-quencher contact, such as with nearby
Tyr59. This could account for the short lifetime component.
The model thus interprets the experimental data on the
basis of the conformational fluctuations of Trp42s alone.
It suggests that the rotameric interconversions of these
Trps, located relatively far from the active site and at
the very start of the flap region, becomes restrained when
the apoenzyme binds the inhibitor. The model is thus consistent
with associating components of the fluorescence decay in
HIV-1 protease to ground state conformational heterogeneity.