To elucidate the roles of tryptophan residues in the structure, stability, and function of Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), its five tryptophan residues were replaced by site-directed mutagenesis with leucine, phenylalanine or valine (W22F, W22L, W30L, W47L, W74F, W74L, W133F, and W133V). Far-ultraviolet circular dichroism (CD) spectra of these mutants reveal that exciton coupling between Trp47 and Trp74 strongly affects the peptide CD of wild-type DHFR, and that Trp133 also contributes appreciably. No additivity was observed in the contributions of individual tryptophan residues to the fluorescence spectrum of wild-type DHFR, Trp74 having a dominant effect. These single-tryptophan mutations induce large changes in the free energy of urea unfolding, which showed values of 1.79-7.14 kcal/mol, compared with the value for wild-type DHFR of 6.08 kcal/mol. Analysis of CD and fluorescence spectra suggests that thermal unfolding involves an intermediate with the native-like secondary structure, the disrupted Trp47-Trp74 exciton coupling, and the solvent-exposed Trp30 and Trp47 side chains. All the mutants except W22L (13%) retain more than 50% of the enzyme activity of wild-type DHFR. These results demonstrate that the five tryptophan residues of DHFR play important roles in its structure and stability but do not crucially affect its enzymatic function.