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1.
Introduction of the bchP gene from Rhodobacter sphaeroides encoding geranylgeranyl reductase into Rhodospirillum rubrum alters the esterification of the bacteriochlorophylls so that phytol is used instead of geranylgeraniol. The resulting transconjugant strain of Rs. rubrum grows photosynthetically, showing that phytolated Bchla can substitute for the native pigment in both the reaction center (RC) and the light-harvesting 1 (LH1) complexes. This genetic manipulation perturbs the native carotenoid biosynthetic pathway; several biosynthetic intermediates are assembled into the core complex and are capable of energy transfer to the bacteriochlorophylls. RC-LH1 complexes containing phytolated Bchla were analyzed by low temperature absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy and circular dichroism. These show that phytolated Bchls can assemble in vivo into the photosynthetic apparatus of Rs. rubrum and that the newly introduced phytol tail provokes small perturbations to the Bchls within their binding sites in the LH1 complex. The RC-LH1 core complex was purified from membranes and reconstituted into well ordered two-dimensional crystals with a p4212 space group. A projection map calculated to 9 A shows clearly that the LH1 ring from the mutant is composed of 16 subunits that surround the reaction center and that the diameter of this complex is in close agreement with that of the wild-type LH1 complex.  相似文献   

2.
We have characterized the influence of the protein environment on the spectral properties of the bacteriochlorophyll (Bchl) molecules of the peripheral light-harvesting (or LH2) complex from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The spectral density functions of the pigments responsible for the 800 and 850 nm electronic transitions were determined from the temperature dependence of the Bchl absorption spectra in different environments (detergent micelles and native membranes). The spectral density function is virtually independent of the hydrophobic support that the protein experiences. The reorganization energy for the B850 Bchls is 220 cm(-1), which is almost twice that of the B800 Bchls, and its Huang-Rhys factor reaches 8.4. Around the transition point temperature, and at higher temperatures, both the static spectral inhomogeneity and the resonance interactions become temperature-dependent. The inhomogeneous distribution function of the transitions exhibits less temperature dependence when LH2 is embedded in membranes, suggesting that the lipid phase protects the protein. However, the temperature dependence of the fluorescence spectra of LH2 cannot be fitted using the same parameters determined from the analysis of the absorption spectra. Correct fitting requires the lowest exciton states to be additionally shifted to the red, suggesting the reorganization of the exciton spectrum.  相似文献   

3.
P Braun  A Scherz 《Biochemistry》1991,30(21):5177-5184
The light-harvesting complex (LHC) B850 from Rhodobacter sphaeroides was dissociated into several fragments by treatment with sodium dodecyl sulfate. The molecular weight of each fragment was determined by using transverse polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions and gel filtration techniques. Four B850 LHCs were observed, having molecular weights of 60,000, 72,000-75,000, 105,000, and 125,000-145,000, and two small bacteriochlorophyll (Bchl)-polypeptide complexes having molecular weights of 6000-8000 and 12,000-14,000. Each of the B850 complexes contains ca. one Bchl a for each 6.5-kDa protein. The optical absorption and circular dichroism of the B850 LHCs recorded directly from the gels are similar to those measured previously for a 22-24-kDa B850 LHCs by Sauer and Austin [(1978) Biochemistry 17, 2011-2019]. These data, combined with studies of other groups, indicate that the smallest LHC in LH1 and LH2 is a Bchl-polypeptide tetramer. Each tetramer contains two Bchl dimers that probably have the structure of P-860, the primary electron donor in Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and two alpha-beta-polypeptide pairs. Interactions among the paired Bchls shift their individual Qy transitions from 780-800 to 850-860 nm, and interactions among two such pairs induce the circular dichroism signal of the LHCs. Three Bchl-polypeptide tetramers probably form a dodecamer having C3 symmetry, and six such dodecamers organize into a large hexagon that can accommodate one or two reaction center complexes.  相似文献   

4.
LH2 complexes from Rb. sphaeroides were modified genetically so that lycopene, with 11 saturated double bonds, replaced the native carotenoids which contain 10 saturated double bonds. Tuning the S1 level of the carotenoid in LH2 in this way affected the dynamics of energy transfer within LH2, which were investigated using both steady-state and time-resolved techniques. The S1 energy of lycopene in n-hexane was determined to be approximately 12 500 +/- 150 cm(-1), by direct measurement of the S1-S2 transient absorption spectrum using a femtosecond IR-probing technique, thus placing an upper limit on the S1 energy of lycopene in the LH2 complex. Fluorescence emission and excitation spectra demonstrated that energy can be transferred from lycopene to the bacteriochlorophyll molecules within this LH2 complex. The energy-transfer dynamics within the mutant complex were compared to wild-type LH2 from Rb. sphaeroides containing the carotenoid spheroidene and from Rs. molischianum, in which lycopene is the native carotenoid. The results show that the overall efficiency for Crt --> B850 energy transfer is approximately 80% in lyco-LH2 and approximately 95% in WT-LH2 of Rb. sphaeroides. The difference in overall Crt --> BChl transfer efficiency of lyco-LH2 and WT-LH2 mainly relates to the low efficiency of the Crt S(1) --> BChl pathway for complexes containing lycopene, which was 20% in lyco-LH2. These results show that in an LH2 complex where the Crt S1 energy is sufficiently high to provide efficient spectral overlap with both B800 and B850 Q(y) states, energy transfer via the Crt S1 state occurs to both pigments. However, the introduction of lycopene into the Rb. sphaeroides LH2 complex lowers the S1 level of the carotenoid sufficiently to prevent efficient transfer of energy to the B800 Q(y) state, leaving only the Crt S1 --> B850 channel, strongly suggesting that Crt S1 --> BChl energy transfer is controlled by the relative Crt S1 and BChl Q(y) energies.  相似文献   

5.
Carotenoids in the peripheral light-harvesting complexes (LH2) of the green mutant (GM309) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides were identified as containing neurosporenes, which lack the polar CH(3)O group, compared to spheroidenes in native-LH2 of R. sphaeroides 601. After LH2 complexes were treated with 1-anilino-8-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS), new energy transfer pathways from ANS or tryptophan to carotenoids were discovered in both native- and GM309-LH2. The carotenoid fluorescence intensity of GM309-LH2 was greater than that of native-LH2 when bound with ANS, suggesting that the elimination of polarity in the neurosporene increases the energy transfer from ANS to carotenoid. The fact that two alpha-tyrosines (alpha-Tyr 44, 45, B850-binding sites) in each alpha-apoprotein of GM309-LH2 were more easily modified than those of native-LH2 by N-acetylimidazole (NAI) indicates that the elimination of polarity in the neurosporene terminus increases the exposure of these sites to solution.  相似文献   

6.
Here, the solution structure of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides core light-harvesting complex beta polypeptide solubilised in chloroform:methanol is presented. The structure, determined by homonuclear NMR spectroscopy and distance geometry, comprises two alpha helical regions (residue -34 to -15 and -11 to +6, using the numbering system in which the conserved histidine residue is numbered zero) joined by a more flexible four amino acid residue linker. The C-terminal helix forms the membrane spanning region in the intact LH1 complex, whilst the N-terminal helix must lie in the lipid head groups or in the cytoplasm, and form the basis of interaction with the alpha polypeptide. The structure of a mutant beta polypeptide W(+9)F was also determined. This mutant, which is deficient in a hydrogen bond donor to the bacteriochlorophyll, showed an identical structure to the wild-type, implying that observed differences in interaction with other LH1 polypeptides must arise from cofactor binding. Using these structures we propose a modification to existing models of the intact LH1 complex by replacing the continuous helix of the beta polypeptide with two helices, one of which lies at an acute angle to the membrane plane. We suggest that a key difference between LH1 and LH2 is that the beta subunit is more bent in LH1. This modification puts the N terminus of LH1beta close to the reaction centre H subunit, and provides a rationale for the different ring sizes of LH1 and LH2 complexes.  相似文献   

7.
Carotenoids play important roles in photosynthesis where they are involved in light-harvesting, in photo-protection and in the assembly and structural stability of light-harvesting and reaction centre complexes. In order to examine the effects of carotenoids on the oligomeric state of the reaction centre-light-harvesting 1 -PufX (RC-LH1-PufX) core complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides two carotenoid-less mutants, TC70 and R-26, were studied. Detergent fractionation showed that in the absence of carotenoids LH2 complexes do not assemble, as expected, but also that core complexes are predominantly found as monomers, although levels of the PufX polypeptide appeared to be unaffected. Analysis of R-26 membranes by electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy reveals arrays of hexagonally packed monomeric RC-LH1-PufX complexes. Transfer of the crtB gene encoding phytoene synthase to TC70 and R-26 restores the normal synthesis of carotenoids demonstrating that the R-26 mutant of Rba. sphaeroides harbours a mutation in crtB, among its other defects. The transconjugant TC70 and R-26 strains containing crtB had regained their ability to assemble wild-type levels of dimeric RC-LH1-PufX core complexes and normal energy transfer pathways were restored, demonstrating that carotenoids are essential for the normal assembly and function of both the LH2 and RC-LH1-PufX complexes in this bacterial photosystem.  相似文献   

8.
Fine tuning of the spectral properties of LH2 by single amino acid residues   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The peripheral light-harvesting complex, LH2, of Rhodobacter sphaeroides consists of an assembly of membrane-spanning alpha and beta polypeptides which assemble the photoactive bacteriochlorophyll and carotenoid molecules. In this study we systematically investigated bacteriochlorophyll-protein interactions and their effect on functional bacteriochlorophyll assembly by site-directed mutations of the LH2 alpha-subunit. The amino acid residues, isoleucine at position -1 and serine at position -4 were replaced by 12 and 13 other residues, respectively. All residues replacing isoleucine at position -1 supported the functional assembly of LH2. The replacement of isoleucine by glycine, glutamine or asparagine, however, produced LH2 complex with significantly altered spectral properties in comparison to LH2 WT. As indicated by resonance Raman spectroscopy extensive rearrangement of the bacteriochlorophyll-B850 macrocycle(s) took place in LH2 in which isoleucine -1 was replaced by glycine. The replacement results in disruption of the H-bond between the C3 acetyl groups and the aromatic residues +13/+14 without affecting the H-bond involving the C13(1) keto group. In contrast, nearly all amino acid replacements of serine at position -4 resulted in shifting of the bacteriochlorophyll-B850 red most absorption maximum. Interestingly, the extent of shifting closely correlated with the volume of the residue at position -4. These results illustrate that fine tuning of the spectral properties of the bacteriochlorophyll-B850 molecules depend on their packing with single amino acid residues at distinct positions.  相似文献   

9.
The photosynthetic apparatus of Rhodobacter sphaeroides is comprised of three types of pigment-protein complex: the photochemical reaction centre and its attendant LH1 and LH2 light-harvesting complexes. To augment existing deletion/insertion mutants in the genes coding for these complexes we have constructed two further mutants, one of which is a novel double mutant which is devoid of all three types of complex. We have also constructed vectors for the expression of either LH1, LH2 or reaction-centre genes. The resulting system allows each pigment-protein complex to be studied either as part of an intact photosystem or as the sole complex in the cell. In this way we have demonstrated that reaction centres can assemble independently of either light-harvesting complex in R. sphaeroides. In addition, the isolation of derivatives of the deletion/insertion mutants exhibiting spontaneous mutations in carotenoid biosynthesis provides an avenue for examining the role of carotenoids in the assembly of the photosynthetic apparatus. We show that the LH1 complex is assembled regardless of the carotenoid background, and that the type of carotenoid present modifies the absorbance of the LH1 bacteriochlorophylls.  相似文献   

10.
This work presents a comparative study of the frequencies of spectral jumping of individual light-harvesting complexes of six different types: LH2 of Rhodopseudomonas acidophila, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and Rhodospirillum molischianum; LH1 of Rhodobacter sphaeroides; and two "domain swap mutants" of LH2 of Rhodobacter sphaeroides: PACLH1 and PACLH2mol, in which the alpha-polypeptide C-terminus is exchanged with the corresponding sequence from LH1 of Rhodobacter sphaeroides or LH2 of Rhodospirillum molischianum, respectively. The quasistable states of fluorescence peak wavelength that were previously observed for the LH2 of Rps. acidophila were confirmed for other species. We also observed occurrences of extremely blue-shifted spectra, which were associated with reversible bleaching of one of the chromophore rings. Different jumping behavior is observed for single complexes of different types investigated with the same equivalent excitation intensity. The differences in spectral diffusion are associated with subtle differences of the binding pocket of B850 pigments and the structural flexibility of the different types of complexes.  相似文献   

11.
The transmembrane, bacteriochlorophyll-binding region of a bacterial light-harvesting complex, (LH2-alpha from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides) was redesigned and overexpressed in a mutant of Rb. sphaeroides lacking LH2. Bacteriochlorophyll served as internal probe for the fitness of this new region for the assembly and energy transfer function of the LH2 complex. The ability to absorb and transfer light energy is practically undisturbed by the exchange of the transmembrane segment, valine -7 to threonine +6, of LH2-alpha with a 14 residue Ala-Leu sequence. This stretch makes up the residues of the transmembrane helix that are in close contact (< or =4.5 A) with the bacteriochlorophyll molecules that are coordinated through His of both the alpha and beta-subunits. In this Ala-Leu stretch, neither alpha-His0, which binds the bacteriochlorophyll, nor the adjacent alpha-Ile-1, were replaced. Novel LH2 complexes composed of LH2-alpha with a model transmembrane sequence and a normal LH2-beta are assembled in vivo into a complex, the biochemical and spectroscopic properties of which closely resemble the native one. In contrast, the additional insertion of four residues just outside the C-terminal end of the model transmembrane helix leads to complete loss of functional antenna complex. The results suggest that light energy can be harvested and transferred efficiently by bacteriochlorophyll molecules attached to only few key residues distributed over the polypeptide, while residues at the bacteriochlorophyll-helix interface seem to be largely dispensable for the functional assembly of this membrane protein complex. This novel antenna with a simplified transmembrane domain and a built-in probe for assembly and function provides a powerful model system for investigation of the factors that contribute to the assembly of chromophores in membrane-embedded proteins.  相似文献   

12.
Gall A  Cogdell RJ  Robert B 《Biochemistry》2003,42(23):7252-7258
In the LH2 proteins from Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides, the hydrogen bonds between the bacteriochlorophyll (Bchl) molecules and their proteic binding sites exhibit a strong variance with respect to carotenoid content and type. In the absence of the carotenoid molecule, such as in the LH2 from Rb. sphaeroides R26.1, the void in the protein structure induces a significant reorganization of the binding site of both Bchl molecules responsible for the 850 nm absorption, which is not observed when the 800 nm absorbing Bchl is selectively removed from these complexes. FT Raman spectra of LH2 complexes from Rb. sphaeroides show that the strength of the hydrogen bond between the 850 nm absorbing Bchl bound to the alpha polypeptide and the tyrosine alpha(45) depends precisely on the chemical nature of the bound carotenoid. These results suggest that the variable extremity of the carotenoid is embedded in these LH2 complexes, lying close to the interacting Bchl molecules. In the LH2 from Rhodopseudomonas acidophila, the equivalent part of the rhodopin glucoside, which bears the glucose group, lies close to the amino terminal of the antenna polypeptide. This contrast suggests that the structure of the carotenoid binding site in LH2 complexes strongly depends on the bacterial species and/or on the chemical nature of the bound carotenoid.  相似文献   

13.
A three-dimensional model of the dimeric reaction center-light harvesting I-PufX (RC-LH1-PufX) complex from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, calculated from electron microscope single particle analysis of negatively stained complexes, shows that the two halves of the dimer molecule incline toward each other on the periplasmic side, creating a remarkable V-shaped structure. The distribution of negative stain is consistent with loose packing of the LH1 ring near the 14th LH1 alpha/beta pair, which could facilitate the migration of quinone and quinol molecules across the LH1 boundary. The three-dimensional model encloses a space near the reaction center Q(B) site and the 14th LH1 alpha/beta pair, which is approximately 20 angstroms in diameter, sufficient to sequester a quinone pool. Helical arrays of dimers were used to construct a three-dimensional membrane model, which matches the packing lattice deduced from electron microscope analysis of the tubular dimer-only membranes found in mutants of Rba. sphaeroides lacking the LH2 complex. The intrinsic curvature of the dimer explains the shape and approximately 70-nm diameter of these membrane tubules, and at least partially accounts for the spherical membrane invaginations found in wild-type Rba. sphaeroides. A model of dimer aggregation and membrane curvature in these spherical membrane invaginations is presented.  相似文献   

14.
A green mutant was obtained among the chemically induced mutants of Rhodo-bacter sphaeroides 601 (RS601) and named GM309. A blue shift of 20 nm of the carotenoid absorption spectrum was found in the light-harvesting complex II (LH2) of GM309. Different from LH2 of RS601, it was found that the carotenoids in GM309-LH2 changed to be neurosporene by mutation. Neurosporene lacks a conjugate double bond, compared with the spheroidene in RS601-LH2 which has ten conjugate double bonds. As shown by absorption and circular di-chroism spectroscopy, the overall structure of GM309-LH2 is little affected by this change. From fluorescence emission spectra, it is found that GM309-LH2 can transfer energy from carotenoids to Bchl-B850 without any change in efficiency. But the efficiency of energy transfer from B800 to B850 in GM309-LH2 is decreased to be 42% of that of the native. This work would provide a novel method to investigate the mechanism of excitation energy transfer in LH2.  相似文献   

15.
This minireview summarizes our present view of the supramolecular organization of the photosynthetic apparatus of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodobacter capsulatus. These two species present a close association between two reaction centers (RCs), one cytochrome (cyt) bc(1) and one cyt c. In R. sphaeroides, the RCs are only partially surrounded by LH1 complexes. This open ring of LH1 complexes is required for an efficient photoinduced cyclic electron transfer only under conditions where the quinone pool totally reduced. When the quinone pool is partially oxidized, a closed ring of LH1 complexes around the RCs does not impair the exchange of quinone molecules between the RC and the cyt bc(1) complex. To explain the efficient photochemistry of the various species which possess a RC surrounded by a closed ring of LH, it is proposed that their quinone pool is partially oxidized even under anaerobic condition.  相似文献   

16.
Noy D  Dutton PL 《Biochemistry》2006,45(7):2103-2113
We introduce LH1beta24, a minimal 24 amino acid polypeptide that binds and assembles bacteriochlorophylls (BChls) in micelles of octyl beta-glucoside (OG) into complexes with spectral properties that resemble those of B820, a universal intermediate in the assembly of native purple bacterial light-harvesting complexes (LHs). LH1beta24 was designed by a survey of sequences and crystal structures of bacterial LH proteins from different organisms combined with currently available information from in vitro reconstitution studies and genetically modified LHs in vivo. We took as a template for the design sphbeta31, a truncated 31 amino acid analogue of the native beta-apoprotein from the core LH complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides. This peptide self-assembles with BChls to form B820 and, upon cooling and lowering OG concentration, forms red-shifted B850 spectral species that are considered analogous to native LH complexes. We find that LH1beta24 self-assembles with BChl in OG to form homodimeric B820-type subunits comprising two LH1beta24 and two BChl molecules per subunit. We demonstrate, by modeling the structure using the highly homologous structure of LH2 from Rhodospirillum molischianum, that it has the minimal size for BChl binding. Additionally, we have compared the self-assembly of sphbeta31 and LH1beta24 with BChls and discovered that the association enthalpies and entropies of both species are similar to those measured for native LH1 from Rhodospirillum rubrum. However, sphbeta31 readily aggregates into intermediate higher oligomeric species and further to form B850 species; moreover, the assembly process of these oligomers is not reversible, and they are apparently large nonspecific BChl-peptide coaggregates rather than well-defined nativelike LH complexes. Similar aggregates were observed during LH1beta24 assembly, but these were formed less readily and required lower temperatures than sphbeta31. In view of these results, we reevaluate previous in vitro reconstitution studies and propose alternative templates for new designs.  相似文献   

17.
A series of light-harvesting 1 (LH1) complexes was isolated by lithium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at 4 degrees C from Rhodobacter sphaeroides M21, which lacks the peripheral light-harvesting 2 (LH2) complex. This ladder of LH1 bands was also demonstrated in the wild type, partially superimposed upon a smaller number of LH2 complexes. An assessment of electrophoretic mobility vs acrylamide concentration, in which the reaction center LM particle and annular LH1 and LH2 complexes were used as standards of known structure, indicated that the LH1 gel bands 2 to 10 represent regular oligomers of an alpha beta heterodimeric unit, that vary in size from (alpha beta)(2-3) to (alpha beta)(10-11). The isolated LH1 complexes exhibited oligomeric state dependent optical properties, characterized by red shifts in near-IR absorption and emission maxima at 77 K of approximately 6 nm as aggregate sizes increased from approximately 3 to 7-8 alpha beta-heterodimers, accompanied by shifts in highly polarized fluorescence from the blue to the red side of the absorption band. This has been explained by the oligomerization of heterodimers to form a curvilinear array of excitonically coupled chromophores, with the anisotropic long-wavelength component, designated originally as B896, corresponding to low energy excitonic transitions arising from interactions within inhomogeneous BChl clusters [Westerhuis et al. (1999) J. Phys. Chem. B 103, 7733-7742]. Differences in electrophoretic profiles of LH1 bands between strains M21 and M2192, an LH1-only strain that also lacks PufX, further suggested that the more rapidly migrating bands represent arced fragments of the curvilinear array of LH1 complexes thought to exist as a large closed circular structure only in the latter strain. The electrophoretic banding pattern also indicated that the LH1 complex may be located at the peripheries of dimeric intramembrane particle arrays seen in freeze-fracture replicas of tubular M21 membranes; the possible role for the PufX protein in the assembly of these structures is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1 is a member of the nonsulfur purple facultative photosynthetic proteobacteria, capable of growth under a variety of cultivation conditions. In addition to the structural polypeptides and bacteriochlorophyll, the two major antenna complexes, B875 and B800-850, contain a variety of carotenoids which are an important structural and functional component of the membrane-bound photosynthetic complexes of this bacterium. Two major carotenoids, spheroidene and its keto derivative, spheroidenone, are differentially synthesized by R. sphaeroides, depending on the growth conditions. Spheroidene prevails during growth under anaerobic conditions and low light intensities, whereas spheroidenone is predominant in semiaerobically grown cells or during anaerobic growth at high light intensities. In this study, we demonstrate that in wild-type cells, spheroidene is predominantly associated with the B800-850 photosynthetic antenna complex and spheroidenone is more abundant in the B875 complex. Exploiting mutants defective in the biosynthesis of either the B875 or B800-850 light-harvesting complex, we demonstrate an association between the formation of either the B875 or B800-850 complex, on the one hand, and the accumulation of spheroidenone or spheroidene, on the other. The possible involvement of the conversion of spheroidene to spheroidenone as a significant control mechanism involved in the adaptation of R. sphaeroides to changes in light intensity and oxygen tension is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
We have determined the solution structures of the core light-harvesting (LH1) alpha and beta-polypeptides from wild-type purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum using multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. The two polypeptides form stable alpha helices in organic solution. The structure of alpha-polypeptide consists of a long helix of 32 amino acid residues over the central transmembrane domain and a short helical segment at the N terminus that is followed by a three-residue loop. Pigment-coordinating histidine residue (His29) in the alpha-polypeptide is located near the middle of the central helix. The structure of beta-polypeptide shows a single helix of 32 amino acid residues in the membrane-spanning region with the pigment-coordinating histidine residue (His38) at a position close to the C-terminal end of the helix. Strong hydrogen bonds have been identified for the backbone amide protons over the central helical regions, indicating a rigid property of the two polypeptides. The overall structures of the R.rubrum LH1 alpha and beta-polypeptides are different from those previously reported for the LH1 beta-polypeptide of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, but are very similar to the structures of the corresponding LH2 alpha and beta-polypeptides determined by X-ray crystallography. A model constructed for the structural subunit (B820) of LH1 complex using the solution structures reveals several important features on the interactions between the LH1 alpha and beta-polypeptides. The significance of the N-terminal regions of the two polypeptides for stabilizing both B820 and LH1 complexes, as clarified by many experiments, may be attributed to the interactions between the short N-terminal helix (Trp2-Gln6) of alpha-polypeptide and a GxxxG motif in the beta-polypeptide.  相似文献   

20.
In addition to the roles of antioxidant and spacer, carotenoids (Cars) in purple photosynthetic bacteria pursue two physiological functions, i.e., light harvesting and photoprotection. To reveal the mechanisms of the photoprotective function, i.e., quenching triplet bacteriochlorophyll to prevent the sensitized generation of singlet oxygen, the triplet absorption spectra were recorded for Cars, where the number of conjugated double bonds (n) is in the region of 9-13, to determine the dependence on n of the triplet lifetime. The Cars examined include those in (a) solution; (b) the reconstituted LH1 complexes; (c) the native LH2 complexes from Rba. sphaeroides G1C, Rba. sphaeroides 2.4.1, Rsp. molischianum, and Rps. acidophila 10050; (d) the RCs from Rba. sphaeroides G1C, Rba. sphaeroides 2.4.1, and Rsp. rubrum S1; and (e) the RC-LH1 complexes from Rba. sphaeroides G1C, Rba. sphaeroides 2.4.1, Rsp. molischianum, Rps. acidophila 10050, and Rsp. rubrum S1. The results lead us to propose the following mechanisms: (i) A substantial shift of the linear dependence to shorter lifetimes on going from solution to the LH2 complex was ascribed to the twisting of the Car conjugated chain. (ii) A substantial decrease in the slope of the linear dependence on going from the reconstituted LH1 to the LH1 component of the RC-LH1 complex was ascribed to the minor-component Car forming a leak channel of triplet energy. (iii) The loss of conjugation-length dependence on going from the isolated RC to the RC component of the RC-LH1 complex was ascribed to the presence of a triplet-energy reservoir consisting of bacteriochlorophylls in the RC component.  相似文献   

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