Study of wild type and genetically modified reaction centers from Rhodobacter capsulatus: structural comparison with Rhodopseudomonas viridis and Rhodobacter sphaeroides. |
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Authors: | L. Baciou E. J. Bylina P. Sebban |
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Affiliation: | UPR 407, Bat. 24, Centre National de le Recherche Scientifique Gif/Yvette, France. |
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Abstract: | Reaction centers from the purple bacterium Rhodobacter (Rb.) capsulatus and from two mutants ThrL226-->Ala and IleL229-->Ser, modified in the binding protein pocket of the secondary quinone acceptor (QB), have been studied by flash-induced absorbance spectroscopy. In ThrL226-->Ala, the binding affinities for endogenous QB (ubiquinone 10) and UQ6 are found to be two to three times as high as the wild type. In contrast, in IleL229-->Ser, the binding affinity for UQ6 is decreased about three times compared to the wild type. In ThrL226-->Ala, a markedly increased sensitivity (approximately 30 times) to o-phenanthroline is observed. In Rhodopseudomonas viridis, where Ala is naturally in position L226, the sensitivity to o-phenanthroline is close to that observed in ThrL226-->Ala. We propose that the presence of Ala in position L226 is responsible for the high sensitivity to that inhibitor. The pH dependencies of the rate constants of P+QB- (kBP) charge recombination kinetics (P is a dimer of bacteriochlorophyll, and QB is the secondary quinone electron acceptor) show destabilization of QB- in ThrL226-->Ala and IleL229-->Ser, compared to the wild type. At low pH, similar apparent pK values of protonation of amino acids around QB- are measured in the wild type and the mutants. In contrast to Rb. sphaeroides, in the wild type Rb. capsulatus, kBP substantially increases in the pH range 7-10.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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