Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence is widely used as a sensitive reporter of protein conformational dynamics, yet the molecular origin of its temperature-dependent modulation remains unclear. Here we investigate the conformational dynamics of Trp134 in bovine serum albumin (BSA) using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, free-energy calculations based on umbrella sampling and WHAM, quantum mechanical (QM) calculations, and QM/MM approaches. MD simulations show that the global structure of BSA remains stable while temperature induces a gradual population shift from the Ia to the Ia- rotamer. The corresponding free-energy landscapes reveal that this shift arises from subtle changes in basin stability and transition barriers along the rotameric coordinate. In contrast, standalone QM calculations on isolated tryptophan predict different energetic trends, highlighting the sensitivity of rotamer stability to electronic-structure treatments and environmental effects. QM/MM calculations partially reconcile these differences by incorporating the protein environment. Together, these results suggest that temperature reshapes the rotamer free-energy landscape of Trp134, leading to population shifts that modulate intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence in proteins.
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