The peptide denoted K159 (30 residues) derives from the catalytic core (CC) sequence of HIV-1 integrase (IN, residues 147-175). In the crystal structure of CC, the corresponding segment belongs to the alpha4 helix (residues 148-168, including residues Glu 152, Lys 156 and Lys 159, crucial for enzyme activity and DNA recognition), a loop (residues 169-171) and a part of the alpha5 helix (171-175), involved in enzyme dimerization. We used the fluorescence and the circular dichroism (CD) properties in the near-UV of the aromatic side chain of a tyrosine residue added at the C-terminal end of K159 in order to analyze the behavior of the concentrated and diluted peptide in aqueous trifluoroethanol (TFE), in an attempt to connect the information obtainable at high (NMR), medium (CD) and low (fluorescence) concentrations of the peptide. Altogether, the C-terminal tyrosine residue provided indirect information on the global conformation of K159 and on the local orientation and environment of the residue. The propensity of TFE to stabilize alpha-helical conformations in peptides was confirmed in CD and fluorescence experiments at relatively high (20-160 microM) and low (2-16 microM) concentrations, respectively. At relatively high concentration, stabilization of the peptide into alpha-helical conformation favored its auto-association likely in parallel coiled-coil dimers, as pointed out in our previous work [Eur. J. Biochem. 253 (1998) 236]. This was further confirmed by ANS (1-anilinonaphtalene-8-sulfonic acid) analysis and fluorescence temperature coefficient measurement. With diluted K159, a Stern-Volmer analysis with positively and negatively charged quenchers indicated that, when the intermolecular interactions were absent, the tyrosine was in a positively charged environment, as if the peptide folded into a U-shaped conformation similar to that present in the crystal structure of the enzyme.