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1.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy reveals functional and structural similarities between the reaction centres of the chlorophyll d-binding photosystem I (PS I) and chlorophyll a-binding PS I. Continuous wave EPR spectrometry at 12K identifies iron-sulphur centres as terminal electron acceptors of chlorophyll d-binding PS I. A transient light-induced electron spin echo (ESE) signal indicates the presence of a quinone as the secondary electron acceptor (Q) between P(740)(+) and the iron-sulphur centres. The distance between P(740)(+) and Q(-) was estimated within point-dipole approximation as 25.23+/-0.05A, by the analysis of the electron spin echo envelope modulation.  相似文献   

2.
In photosystem I (PS I), phylloquinone (PhQ) acts as a low potential electron acceptor during light-induced electron transfer (ET). The origin of the very low midpoint potential of the quinone is investigated by introducing anthraquinone (AQ) into PS I in the presence and absence of the iron-sulfur clusters. Solvent extraction and reincubation is used to obtain PS I particles containing AQ and the iron-sulfur clusters, whereas incubation of the menB rubA double mutant yields PS I with AQ in the PhQ site but no iron-sulfur clusters. Transient electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy is used to investigate the orientation of AQ in the binding site and the ET kinetics. The low temperature spectra suggest that the orientation of AQ in all samples is the same as that of PhQ in native PS I. In PS I containing the iron sulfur clusters, (i) the rate of forward electron transfer from the AQ*- to F(X) is found to be faster than from PhQ*- to F(X), and (ii) the spin polarization patterns provide indirect evidence that the preceding ET step from A0*- to quinone is slower than in the native system. The changes in the kinetics are in accordance with the more negative reduction midpoint potential of AQ. Moreover, a comparison of the spectra in the presence and absence of the iron-sulfur clusters suggests that the midpoint potential of AQ is more negative in the presence of F(X). The electron transfer from the AQ- to F(X) is found to be thermally activated with a lower apparent activation energy than for PhQ in native PS I. The spin polarization patterns show that the triplet character in the initial state of P700)*+AQ*- increases with temperature. This behavior is rationalized in terms of a model involving a distribution of lifetimes/redox potentials for A0 and related competition between charge recombination and forward electron transfer from the radical pair P700*+A0*-.  相似文献   

3.
The photosystem (PS) I photosynthetic reaction center was modified thorough the selective extraction and exchange of chlorophylls and quinones. Extraction of lyophilized photosystem I complex with diethyl ether depleted more than 90% chlorophyll (Chl) molecules bound to the complex, preserving the photochemical electron transfer activity from the primary electron donor P700 to the acceptor chlorophyll A(0). The treatment extracted all the carotenoids and the secondary acceptor phylloquinone (A(1)), and produced a PS I reaction center that contains nine molecules of Chls including P700 and A(0), and three Fe-S clusters (F(X), F(A) and F(B)). The ether-extracted PS I complex showed fast electron transfer from P700 to A(0) as it is, and to FeS clusters if phylloquinone or an appropriate artificial quinone was reconstituted as A(1). The ether-extracted PS I enabled accurate detection of the primary photoreactions with little disturbance from the absorbance changes of the bulk pigments. The quinone reconstitution created the new reactions between the artificial cofactors and the intrinsic components with altered energy gaps. We review the studies done in the ether-extracted PS I complex including chlorophyll forms of the core moiety of PS I, fluorescence of P700, reaction rate between A(0) and reconstituted A(1), and the fast electron transfer from P700 to A(0). Natural exchange of chlorophyll a to 710-740 nm absorbing chlorophyll d in PS I of the newly found cyanobacteria-like organism Acaryochloris marina was also reviewed. Based on the results of exchange studies in different systems, designs of photosynthetic reaction centers are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
This review considers the state-of-the-art on mechanisms and alternative pathways of electron transfer in photosynthetic electron transport chains of chloroplasts and cyanobacteria. The mechanisms of electron transport control between photosystems (PS) I and II and the Calvin–Benson cycle are considered. The redistribution of electron fluxes between the noncyclic, cyclic, and pseudocyclic pathways plays an important role in the regulation of photosynthesis. Mathematical modeling of light-induced electron transport processes is considered. Particular attention is given to the electron transfer reactions on the acceptor side of PS I and to interactions of PS I with exogenous acceptors, including molecular oxygen. A kinetic model of PS I and its interaction with exogenous electron acceptors has been developed. This model is based on experimental kinetics of charge recombination in isolated PS I. Kinetic and thermodynamic parameters of the electron transfer reactions in PS I are scrutinized. The free energies of electron transfer between quinone acceptors A1A/A1B in the symmetric redox cofactor branches of PS I and iron–sulfur clusters FX, FA, and FB have been estimated. The second-order rate constants of electron transfer from PS I to external acceptors have been determined. The data suggest that byproduct formation of superoxide radical in PS I due to the reduction of molecular oxygen in the A1 site (Mehler reaction) can exceed 0.3% of the total electron flux in PS I.  相似文献   

5.
The B3LYP hybrid density functional method is used to calculate spin densities and hyperfine couplings for the 1,4-naphthosemiquinone anion radical and a model of the phyllosemiquinone anion radical. The effect of hydrogen bonding on the spin density distribution is shown to lead to a redistribution of pi spin density from the semiquinone carbonyl oxygens to the carbonyl carbon atoms. The effect of in plane and out of plane hydrogen bonding is examined. Out of plane hydrogen bonding is shown to give rise to a significant delocalisation of spin density on to the hydrogen bond donor heavy atom. Excellent agreement is observed between calculated and experimental hyperfine couplings. Comparison of calculated hyperfine couplings with experimental determinations for the A1 phyllosemiquinone anion radical present in Photosystem I (PS I) of higher plant photosynthesis indicates that the in vivo radical may have a hydrogen bond to the O4 atom only as opposed to hydrogen bonds to each oxygen atom in alcohol solvents. The hydrogen bonding situation appears to be the reverse of that observed for QA in the bacterial type II reaction centres where the strong hydrogen bond occurs to the quinone O1 oxygen atom. For different types of reaction centre the presence or absence of the non-heme Fe(II) atom may well determine which type of hydrogen bonding situation prevails at the primary quinone site which in turn may influence the direction of subsequent electron transfer.  相似文献   

6.
Recently, solid-state NMR spectroscopy became a viable method to investigate photosynthetic reaction centres (RCs) on the atomic level. To study the electronic structure of the radical cation state of the RC, occurring after the electron emission, solid-state NMR using an illumination set-up can be exploited. This paper describes the illumination set-up we designed for a standard Bruker wide-bore MAS NMR probe. In addition we demonstrate its application to get information from the active site in photosynthetic reaction centres of Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26 by photochemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization (photo-CIDNP). Solid-state NMR spectra of natural abundance 13C in detergent solubilized quinone depleted photosynthetic reaction centres under continuous illumination showed exceptionally strong nuclear spin polarization in NMR lines. Both enhanced-absorptive and emissive polarization were seen in the carbon spectrum which could be assigned to a bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a) cofactor, presumably the special pair BChl a. The sign and intensities of the 13C NMR signals provide information about the electron spin density distribution of the transiently formed radical P.+ on the atomic level.  相似文献   

7.
The light induced electron transfer in photosynthesis generates a series of sequential spin polarized radical pairs, and transient electron paramagnetic resonance (TREPR) is ideally suited to study the lifetimes and physical and electronic structures of these radical pairs. In this article, the basic principles of TREPR are outlined with emphasis on the electron spin polarization (ESP) that develops during the electron transfer process. Examples of the analysis of TREPR data are given to illustrate the information that can be obtained. Recent applications of the technique to study the functionality of reaction centers, light-induced structural changes, and protein–cofactor interactions are reviewed.  相似文献   

8.
The appearance of ESR signals from Photosystem I (PS I) electron acceptors A1 and A0 in water or deuterium oxide suspension was followed using a low-temperature photoaccumulation technique. In deuterated samples the A1 signal was narrowed by a factor of 0.66 compared with the control. This effect was fully reversible upon resuspension of treated samples in H2O. The narrow ESR signal from deuterated A1 had similar power saturation characteristics to the normal signal; however, a signal from a second component resolved by deuteration was saturated at higher microwave powers than the control. The power saturation behaviour of A1 in un-modified reaction centres indicated that it is an anionic semiquinone in a ‘protic’ environment. Deuteration reversibly modified the relative extents of reduction of iron sulphur electron acceptors A and B such that centre B became the more stable electron acceptor. The g-value and line-width of iron sulphur centre X was not modified by deuteration although it appeared to become more efficiently reduced. These results are discussed in the light of current evidence from optical, electron spin polarisation and extraction experiments that suggest that A1 is a quinone, probably vitamin K-1.  相似文献   

9.
Kinetic analysis using pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) of photosynthetic electron transfer in the photosystem I reaction centres of Synechocystis 6803, in wild-type Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and in site directed mutants of the phylloquinone binding sites in C. reinhardtii, indicates that electron transfer from the reaction centre primary electron donor, P700, to the iron-sulphur centres, Fe-S(X/A/B), can occur through either the PsaA or PsaB side phylloquinone. At low temperature reaction centres are frozen in states which allow electron transfer on one side of the reaction centre only. A fraction always donates electrons to the PsaA side quinone, the remainder to the PsaB side.  相似文献   

10.
Room temperature transient EPR spectra of photosystem I (PS I) particles from Synechocystis 6803 are presented. Native PS I samples and preparations depleted in the A1-acceptor site by solvent extraction and then reconstituted with the quinones (Q) vitamin K1 (VK1), duroquinone (DQ and DQd12) and naphthoquinone (NQ) have been studied. Sequential electron transfer to P700+A1- (FeS) and P700+A1 (FeS)- is recovered only with VK1. With DQ and NQ electron transfer is restored to form the radical pair P700+Q- as specified by a characteristic electron spin polarization (ESP)-pattern, but further electron transfer is either slowed down or blocked. A qualitative analysis of the K-band spectrum suggests that the orientation of reconstituted NQ in PS I is different from the native acceptor A1 = VK1.  相似文献   

11.
The application of pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy on short-lived intermediates in Photosystem I is reviewed. The spin polarization in light-induced radical pairs gives rise to a phase shifted 'out-of-phase' electron spin echo signal. This echo signal shows a prominent modulation of its intensity as a function of the spacing between the two microwave pulses. Its modulation frequency is determined by the electron-electron spin couplings within the radical pair. Thereby, the measurement of the dipolar coupling gives direct information about the spin-spin distance and can therefore be used to determine cofactor distances with high precision. Application of this technique to the radical pair P(*+)(700)A(*-)(1) in Photosystem I is discussed. Moreover, if oriented samples (e.g. single crystals) are used, the angular dependence of the dipolar coupling can be used to derive the orientation of the axis connecting donor and acceptor with respect to an external (crystal) axes system. Using out-of-phase electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopy, the localization of the secondary acceptor quinone A(1) has become possible.  相似文献   

12.
The proton-pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase, the respiratory complex I, couples the transfer of electrons from NADH to ubiquinone with the translocation of protons across the membrane. Electron microscopy revealed the two-part structure of the complex with a peripheral arm involved in electron transfer and a membrane arm most likely involved in proton translocation. It was proposed that the quinone binding site is located at the joint of the two arms. Most likely, proton translocation in the membrane arm is enabled by the energy of the electron transfer reaction in the peripheral arm transmitted by conformational changes. For the detection of the conformational changes and the localization of the quinone binding site, we set up a combination of site-directed spin labeling and EPR spectroscopy. Cysteine residues were introduced to the surface of the Escherichia coli complex I. The spin label (1-oxyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-Δ3-pyrroline-3-methyl)-methanethiosulfonate (MTSL) was exclusively bound to the engineered positions. Neither the mutation nor the labeling had an effect on the NADH:decyl-ubiquinone oxidoreductase activity. The characteristic signals of the spin label were detected by EPR spectroscopy, which did not change by reducing the preparation with NADH. A decyl-ubiquinone derivative with the spin label covalently attached to the alkyl chain was synthesized in order to localize the quinone binding site. The distance between a MTSL labeled complex I variant and the bound quinone was determined by continuous-wave (cw) EPR allowing an inference on the location of the quinone binding site. The distances between the labeled quinone and other complex I variants will be determined in future experiments to receive further geometry information by triangulation.  相似文献   

13.
Photosystem I (PS I) is a transmembranal multisubunit complex that mediates light-induced electron transfer from plactocyanine to ferredoxin. The electron transfer proceeds from an excited chlorophyll a dimer (P700) through a chlorophyll a (A0), a phylloquinone (A1), and a [4Fe-4S] iron-sulfur cluster FX, all located on the core subunits PsaA and PsaB, to iron-sulfur clusters FA and FB, located on subunit PsaC. Earlier, it was attempted to determine the function of FX in the absence of FA/B mainly by chemical dissociation of subunit PsaC. However, not all PsaC subunits could be removed from the PS I preparations by this procedure without partially damaging FX. We therefore removed subunit PsaC by interruption of the psaC2 gene of PS I in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Cells could not grow under photosynthetic conditions when subunit PsaC was deleted, yet the PsaC-deficient mutant cells grew under heterotrophic conditions and assembled the core subunits of PS I in which light-induced electron transfer from P700 to A1 occurred. The photoreduction of FX was largely inhibited, as seen from direct measurement of the extent of electron transfer from A1 to FX. From the crystal structure it can be seen that the removal of subunits PsaC, PsaD, and PsaE in the PsaC-deficient mutant resulted in the braking of salt bridges between these subunits and PsaB and PsaA and the formation of a net of two negative surface charges on PsaA/B. The potential induced on FX by these surface charges is proposed to inhibit electron transport from the quinone. In the complete PS I complex, replacement of a cysteine ligand of FX by serine in site-directed mutation C565S/D566E in subunit PsaB caused an approximately 10-fold slow down of electron transfer from the quinone to FX without much affecting the extent of this electron transfer compared with wild type. Based on these and other results, we propose that FX might have a major role in controlling electron transfer through PS I.  相似文献   

14.
Nithya Srinivasan 《BBA》2009,1787(9):1057-682
This review focuses on phylloquinone as an indispensable link between light-induced charge separation and subsequent charge stabilization in Photosystem I (PS I). Here, the role of the polypeptide in conferring the necessary kinetic and thermodynamic properties to phylloquinone so as to specify its functional role in PS I electron transfer is discussed. Photosynthetic electron transfer and the role of quinones in Type I and Type II reaction centers are introduced at the outset with particular emphasis on the determination of redox potentials of the cofactors. Currently used methodologies, particularly time-resolved optical spectroscopy and varieties of magnetic resonance spectroscopy that have become invaluable in uncovering the details of phylloquinone function are described in depth. Recent studies on the selective alteration of the protein environment and on the incorporation of foreign quinones either by chemical or genetic means are explored to assess how these studies have improved our understanding of protein-quinone interactions. Particular attention is paid to the function of the H-bond, methyl group and phytyl tail of the phylloquinone in interacting with the protein environment.  相似文献   

15.
Recent studies of point mutations in photosystem I have suggested that the two kinetic phases of phylloquinone reoxidation represent electron transfer in the two branches of cofactors. This interpretation implies that changes in the relative amplitudes of the two kinetic phases represent a change in the extent of electron transfer in the two branches. Using time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), this issue is investigated in subunit deletion mutants of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002. The spin-polarized EPR signals of P(700)(+)A(1)(-) and P(700)(+)FeS(-), both at room temperature and in frozen solution, are altered by deletion of PsaF and/or PsaE, and the differences from the wild type are much more pronounced in PS I complexes isolated from the mutants using Triton X-100 rather than n-dodecyl beta-d-maltopyranoside. The changes in the transient EPR data for the mutant complexes are consistent with a significant fraction of reaction centers showing (i) faster electron transfer from A(1)(-) to F(X), (ii) slower forward electron transfer from A(0)(-) to A(1), and (iii) slightly altered quinone hyperfine couplings, possibly as a result of a change in the hydrogen bonding. The fraction of fast electron transfer and its dependence on the isolation procedure are estimated approximately from simulations of the room temperature EPR data. The results are discussed in terms of possible models for the electron transfer. It is suggested that the detergent-induced fraction of fast electron transfer is most likely due to alteration of the environment of the quinone in the PsaA branch of cofactors and is not the result of a change in the directionality of electron transfer.  相似文献   

16.
Glycoglycerolipids are dominant lipids of photosynthetic organisms, i.e. higher plants and cyanobacteria. X-ray crystallographic localization of glycerolipids revealed that they are present at functionally and structurally important sites of both the PS I and PS II reaction centres. Phosphatidylglycerol (PG) is an indispensible member of glycerolipids, including the formation of functionally active oligomers of the reaction centres both PS I and PS II. Lipids assist in the assembly of protein subunits of the photosynthetic machinery by pasting the individual protein components together. PG is needed to glue CP43 to the reaction centre core. PG and digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG) interact in photosynthetic processes: PG alone controls electron transport at the acceptor site of PS II, and together with DGDG is involved in electron transport at the donor site of PS II. PG is crucial for the formation of division rings and is implicated in the fission of cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

17.
The role of the phycobilisome core components, ApcD and ApcF, in transferring energy from the phycobilisome to PS I and PS II in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 has been investigated. The genes encoding these proteins have been disrupted in the genomes of wild type Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 and a PS II deficient mutant, PsbD1CD2-, by inserting antibiotic resistance genes into their coding regions. Data from fluorescence emission spectra and pigment content analysis for these inactivation mutants is presented. These data suggest that both ApcD and ApcF are involved in the energy transfer route to PS II and PS I. In both cases, the energy transfer may to the reaction centres may be via the chromophore of ApcE (the L cm) or anchor polypeptide). The major route of energy transfer to both kinds of reaction centre appears to involve ApcF rather than ApcD. When both ApcF and ApcD are absent, the phycobilisomes are unable to transfer energy to either reaction centre. We suggest a model for the pathways of energy transfer from the phycobilisomes to PS I and PS II.  相似文献   

18.
The directionality of electron transfer in Photosystem I (PS I) is investigated using site-directed mutations in the phylloquinone (QK) and FX binding regions of Synnechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The kinetics of forward electron transfer from the secondary acceptor A1 (phylloquinone) were measured in mutants using time-resolved optical difference spectroscopy and transient EPR spectroscopy. In whole cells and PS I complexes of the wild-type both techniques reveal a major, slow kinetic component of tau approximately 300 ns while optical data resolve an additional minor kinetic component of tau approximately 10 ns. Whole cells and PS I complexes from the W697FPsaA and S692CPsaA mutants show a significant slowing of the slow kinetic component, whereas the W677FPsaB and S672CPsaB mutants show a less significant slowing of the fast kinetic component. Transient EPR measurements at 260 K show that the slow phase is approximately 3 times slower than at room temperature. Simulations of the early time behavior of the spin polarization pattern of P700+A1-, in which the decay rate of the pattern is assumed to be negligibly small, reproduce the observed EPR spectra at 260 K during the first 100 ns following laser excitation. Thus any spin polarization from P700+FX- in this time window is very weak. From this it is concluded that the relative amplitude of the fast phase is negligible at 260 K or its rate is much less temperature-dependent than that of the slow component. Together, the results demonstrate that the slow kinetic phase results from electron transfer from QK-A to FX and that this accounts for at least 70% of the electrons. Although the assignment of the fast kinetic phase remains uncertain, it is not strongly temperature dependent and it represents a minor fraction of the electrons being transferred. All of the results point toward asymmetry in electron transfer, and indicate that forward transfer in cyanobacterial PS I is predominantly along the PsaA branch.  相似文献   

19.
A gene encoding a methyltransferase (menG) was identified in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 as responsible for transferring the methyl group to 2-phytyl-1,4-naphthoquinone in the biosynthetic pathway of phylloquinone, the secondary electron acceptor in photosystem I (PS I). Mass spectrometric measurements showed that targeted inactivation of the menG gene prevented the methylation step in the synthesis of phylloquinone and led to the accumulation of 2-phytyl-1,4-naphthoquinone in PS I. Growth rates of the wild-type and the menG mutant strains under photoautotrophic and photomixotrophic conditions were virtually identical. The chlorophyll a content of the menG mutant strain was similar to that of wild type when the cells were grown at a light intensity of 50 microE m(-2) s(-1) but was slightly lower when grown at 300 microE m(-2) s(-1). Chlorophyll fluorescence emission measurements at 77 K showed a larger increase in the ratio of PS II to PS I in the menG mutant strain relative to the wild type as the light intensity was elevated from 50 to 300 microE m(-2) s(-1). CW EPR studies at 34 GHz and transient EPR studies at multiple frequencies showed that the quinone radical in the menG mutant has a similar overall line width as that for the wild type, but consistent with the presence of an aromatic proton at ring position 2, the pattern of hyperfine splittings showed two lines in the low-field region. The spin polarization pattern indicated that 2-phytyl-1,4-naphthoquinone is in the same orientation as phylloquinone, and out-of-phase, spin-echo modulation spectroscopy shows the same P700(+) to Q(-) center-to-center distance as in wild-type PS I. Transient EPR studies indicated that the lifetime for forward electron transfer from Q(-) to F(X) is slowed from 290 ns in the wild type to 600 ns in the menG mutant. The redox potential of 2-phytyl-1,4-naphthoquinone is estimated to be 50 to 60 mV more oxidizing than phylloquinone in the A(1) site, which translates to a lowering of the equilibrium constant between Q(-)/Q and F(X)(-)/F(X) by a factor of ca. 10. The lifetime of the P700(+) [F(A)/F(B)](-) backreaction decreased from 80 ms in the wild type to 20 ms in the menG mutant strain and is evidence for a thermally activated, uphill electron transfer through the quinone rather than a direct charge recombination between [F(A)/F(B)](-) and P700(+).  相似文献   

20.
The results of studies of charge transfer in cyanobacterial photosystem I (PS I) using the photoelectric method are reviewed. The electrogenicity in the PS I complex and its interaction with natural donors (plastocyanin, cytochrome c(6)), natural acceptors (ferredoxin, flavodoxin), or artificial acceptors and donors (methyl viologen and other redox dyes) were studied. The operating dielectric constant values in the vicinity of the charge transfer carriers in situ were calculated. The profile of distribution of the dielectric constant along the PS I pigment-protein complex (from plastocyanin or cytochrome c(6) through the chlorophyll dimer P700 to the acceptor complex) was estimated, and possible mechanisms of correlation between the local dielectric constant and electron transfer rate constant were discussed.  相似文献   

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