PMID: 2480348Dec 15, 1989Paper

Binding site conformation dictates the color of the dye stains-all. A study of the binding of this dye to the eye lens proteins crystallins.

The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Yogendra SharmaD Balasubramanian

Abstract

The interaction of the cationic carbocyanine dye Stains-all (1-ethyl-2-[3-(1-ethyl-naphthol[1,2-d]thiazolin-2-ylidene)-2- methylpropenyl]naphthol[1,2-d]thiazolium bromide) with the eye lens proteins crystallins has been studied. alpha- and gamma-crystallins do not bind the dye, while beta- and delta-crystallins do, consistent with the fact that the latter two proteins bind the calcium ion. beta-Crystallin resembles parvalbumin in that it induces only the J-band of the bound dye. delta-crystallin, on the other hand, induces only the gamma-band. Analysis of the metachromasia induced in the dye by these and other proteins suggests that Stains-all is responsive to the conformational status of the region to which it binds in a protein. The J-band of the dye is activated when it binds to a globular domain, and the gamma-band is activated when it binds to a helical stretch of the protein.

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