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1.
In preparations of photochemical reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas spheroides R-26, lowering the redox potential so as to reduce the primary electron acceptor prevents the photochemical transfer of an electron from bacteriochlorophyll to the acceptor. Measuring absorbance changes under these conditions, we found that a 20-ns actinic flash converts the reaction center to a new state, PF, which then decays with a half-time that is between 1 and 10 ns at 295 °K. At 25 °K, the decay half-time is approx. 20 ns. The quantum yield of state PF appears to be near 1.0, both at 295 and at 15 °K. State PF could be an intermediate in the photochemical electron-transfer reaction which occurs when the acceptor is in the oxidized form.Following the decay of state PF, we detected another state, PR, with a decay half-time of 6 μs at 295 °K and 120 μs at 15 °K. The quantum yield of state PR is approx. 0.1 at 295 °K, but rises to a value nearer 1.0 at 15 °K. The kinetics and quantum yields are consistent with the view that state PR forms from PF. State PR seems likely to be a side-product, rather than an intermediate in the electron-transfer process.The decay kinetics indicate that state PF cannot be identical with the lowest excited singlet state of the reaction center. One of the two states, PF or PR, probably is the lowest excited triplet state of the reaction center, but it remains unclear which one.  相似文献   

2.
The arrangement and the electron transfer are studied for photosynthetic reaction centers (RC) of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles. Freeze-etch electron micrographs of phase separated mixed vesicles reveal an RC enrichment in the phase containing the acidic lipid serine. It is demonstrated that the electron transfer from cytochrome c to RC involves a two-dimensional diffusion of the membrane bound electron donor with diffusion coefficients (D approximately 10(-9) cm2/sec) characteristic for membrane proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Intramolecular electron transfer within proteins is an essential process in bioenergetics. Redox cofactors are embedded in proteins, and this matrix strongly influences their redox potential. Several cofactors are usually found in these complexes, and they are structurally organized in a chain with distances between the electron donor and acceptor short enough to allow rapid electron tunneling. Among the different interactions that contribute to the determination of the redox potential of these cofactors, electrostatic interactions are important but restive to direct experimental characterization. The influence of interaction between cofactors is evidenced here experimentally by means of redox titrations and time-resolved spectroscopy in a chimeric bacterial reaction center (Maki, H., Matsuura, K., Shimada, K., and Nagashima, K. V. P. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 3921-3928) composed of the core subunits of Rubrivivax gelatinosus and the tetraheme cytochrome of Blastochloris viridis. The absorption spectra and orientations of the various cofactors of this chimeric reaction center are similar to those found in their respective native protein, indicating that their local environment is conserved. However, the redox potentials of both the primary electron donor and its closest heme are changed. The redox potential of the primary electron donor is downshifted in the chimeric reaction center when compared with the wild type, whereas, conversely, that of its closet heme is upshifted. We propose a model in which these reciprocal shifts in the midpoint potentials of two electron transfer partners are explained by an electrostatic interaction between them.  相似文献   

4.
The common ancestor of all photosynthetic prokaryotes and organelles contained chlorophyll (Chl) a. All green and purple photosynthetic bacteria descended from a common bacteriochlorophyll (Bchl) a-containing ancestor which diverged from the Chl a line. Separate PS-I and PS-II reaction centers may have evolved before the appearance of Bchl a. When the transition to Bchl a occurred, the resultant organism contained two types of reaction center, “PS-I” and “PS-II.” One line of development eliminated “PS-II” and evolved into the green bacteria. The other line eliminated “PS-I” and became the purple bacteria. In the Chl a-containing organisms the evolution of PS-II continued until oxygen evolution was achieved.  相似文献   

5.
《BBA》2020,1861(8):148204
Precise folding of photosynthetic proteins and organization of multicomponent assemblies to form functional entities are fundamental to efficient photosynthetic electron transfer. The bacteriochlorophyll b-producing purple bacterium Blastochloris viridis possesses a simplified photosynthetic apparatus. The light-harvesting (LH) antenna complex surrounds the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) to form the RC-LH1 complex. A non-membranous tetraheme cytochrome (4Hcyt) subunit is anchored at the periplasmic surface of the RC, functioning as the electron donor to transfer electrons from mobile electron carriers to the RC. Here, we use atomic force microscopy (AFM) and single-molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS) to probe the long-range organization of the photosynthetic apparatus from Blc. viridis and the unfolding pathway of the 4Hcyt subunit in its native supramolecular assembly with its functional partners. AFM images reveal that the RC-LH1 complexes are densely organized in the photosynthetic membranes, with restricted lateral protein diffusion. Unfolding of the 4Hcyt subunit represents a multi-step process and the unfolding forces of the 4Hcyt α-helices are approximately 121 picoNewtons. Pulling of 4Hcyt could also result in the unfolding of the RC L subunit that binds with the N-terminus of 4Hcyt, suggesting strong interactions between RC subunits. This study provides new insights into the protein folding and interactions of photosynthetic multicomponent complexes, which are essential for their structural and functional integrity to conduct photosynthetic electron flow.  相似文献   

6.
The cysteine residues in beef cytochrome c oxidase (E.C.1.9.3.1) which act as ligands to a redox site have been located in the C-terminal portion of subunit II.  相似文献   

7.
The reactions of Rhodopseudomonas viridis cytochrome c2 and horse cytochrome c with Rps. viridis photosynthetic reaction centers were studied by using both single- and double-flash excitation. Single-flash excitation of the reaction centers resulted in rapid photooxidation of cytochrome c-556 in the cytochrome subunit of the reaction center. The photooxidized cytochrome c-556 was subsequently reduced by electron transfer from ferrocytochrome c2 present in the solution. The rate constant for this reaction had a hyperbolic dependence on the concentration of cytochrome c2, consistent with the formation of a complex between cytochrome c2 and the reaction center. The dissociation constant of the complex was estimated to be 30 microM, and the rate of electron transfer within the 1:1 complex was 270 s-1. Double-flash experiments revealed that ferricytochrome c2 dissociated from the reaction center with a rate constant of greater than 100 s-1 and allowed another molecule of ferrocytochrome c2 to react. When both cytochrome c-556 and cytochrome c-559 were photooxidized with a double flash, the rate constant for reduction of both components was the same as that observed for cytochrome c-556 alone. The observed rate constant decreased by a factor of 14 as the ionic strength was increased from 5 mM to 1 M, indicating that electrostatic interactions contributed to binding. Molecular modeling studies revealed a possible cytochrome c2 binding site on the cytochrome subunit of the reaction center involving the negatively charged residues Glu-93, Glu-85, Glu-79, and Glu-67 which surround the heme crevice of cytochrome c-554.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
In this article, the three-dimensional structures of photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) are presented mainly on the basis of the X-ray crystal structures of the RCs from the purple bacteria Rhodopseudomonas (Rp.) viridis and Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides. In contrast to earlier comparisons and on the basis of the best-defined Rb. sphaeroides structure, a number of the reported differences between the structures cannot be confirmed. However, there are small conformational differences which might provide a basis for the explanation of observed spectral and functional discrepancies between the two species.A particular focus in this review is on the binding site of the secondary quinone (QB), where electron transfer is coupled to the uptake of protons from the cytoplasm. For the discussion of the QB site, a number of newlydetermined coordinate sets of Rp. viridis RCs modified at the QB site have been included. In addition, chains of ordered water molecules are found leading from the cytoplasm to the QB site in the best-defined structures of both Rp. viridis and Rb. sphaeroides RCs.Abbreviations BA accessory bacteriochlorophyll in the active branch - BB accessory bacteriochlorophyll in the inactive branch - D primary electron donor (special pair) - DL special pair bacteriochorophyll bound by the L subunit - DM special pair bacteriochorophyll bound by the M subunit - QA primary electron acceptor quinone - QB secondary electron acceptor quinone - RC reaction center - Rb. Rhodobacter - Rp. Rhodopseudomonas - A bacteriopheophytin in the active branch - B bacteriopheophytin in the inactive branch  相似文献   

9.
The purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodovulum sulfidophilum has an unusual reaction center- (RC-) bound cytochrome subunit with only three hemes, although the subunits of other purple bacteria have four hemes. To understand the electron-transfer pathway through this subunit, three mutants of R. sulfidophilum were constructed and characterized: one lacking the RC-bound cytochrome subunit, another one lacking cytochrome c(2), and another one lacking both of these. The mutant lacking the RC-bound cytochrome subunit was grown photosynthetically with about half the growth rate of the wild type, indicating that the presence of the cytochrome subunit, while not indispensable, is still advantageous for the photosynthetic electron transfer to support its growth. The mutant lacking both the cytochrome subunit and cytochrome c(2) showed a slower rate of growth by photosynthesis (about a fourth of that of the wild type), indicating that cytochrome c(2) is the dominant electron donor to the RC mutationally devoid of the cytochrome subunit. On the other hand, the mutant lacking only the cytochrome c(2) gene grew photosynthetically as fast as the wild type, indicating that cytochrome c(2) is not the predominant donor to the RC-bound triheme cytochrome subunit. We further show that newly isolated soluble cytochrome c-549 with a redox midpoint potential of +238 mV reduced the photooxidized cytochrome subunit in vitro, suggesting that c-549 mediates the cytochrome c(2)-independent electron transfer from the bc(1) complex to the RC-bound cytochrome subunit. These results indicate that the soluble components donating electrons to the RC-bound triheme cytochrome subunit are somewhat different from those of other purple bacteria.  相似文献   

10.
Chen Z  Ost TW  Schelvis JP 《Biochemistry》2004,43(7):1798-1808
It has been well established that the heme redox potential is affected by many different factors. Among others, it is sensitive to the proximal heme ligand and the conformation of the propionate and vinyl groups. In the cytochrome P450 BM3 heme domain, substitution of the highly conserved phenylalanine 393 results in a dramatic change in the heme redox potential [Ost, T. W. B., Miles, C. S., Munro, A. W., Murdoch, J., Reid, G. A., and Chapman, S. K. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 13421-13429]. We have used resonance Raman spectroscopy to characterize heme structural changes and modification of heme interactions with the protein matrix that are induced by the F393 substitutions and to determine their correlation with the heme redox potential. Our results show that the Fe-S stretching frequency of the 5-coordinated, high-spin ferric heme is not affected by the mutations, suggesting that the electron density in the Fe-S bond in this state is not affected by the F393 mutation and is not a good indicator of the heme redox potential. Substrate binding perturbs the hydrogen bonding between one propionate group and the protein matrix and correlates to both the size of residue 393 and the heme redox potential. However, heme reduction does not affect the conformation of the propionate groups. Although the conformation of the vinyl groups is not affected much by substrate binding, their conformation changes from mainly out-of-plane to predominantly in-plane upon heme reduction. The extent of these conformational changes correlates strongly with the size of the 393 residue and the heme redox potential, suggesting that steric interaction between this residue and the vinyl groups may be of importance in regulating the heme redox potential in the P450 BM3 heme domain. Further implications of our findings for the change in redox potential upon mutation of F393 will be discussed.  相似文献   

11.
A subunit which retains heme has been isolated and purified up to a homogenous form on polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic column in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and β-mercaptoethanol from cytochrome oxidase. The separation of the subunit does not rely on any detergent except cholate used in the preparation of cytochrome oxidase. The purification involves a reaction with pyridine, pH precipitation, and DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. The purified subunit has a molecular weight of 11,600 daltons and contains more than 40 nmol Fe per mg protein; the lower iron content than the calculated value is apparently due to the loss of heme a in the course of the purification. The subunit is freely soluble in aqueous solution at neutral pH to give a dark green color. Spectral properties and amino acid composition of this subunit have been studied.  相似文献   

12.
Mammalian cytochrome c can effectively replace bacterial cytochrome c2 as the electron donor to the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center in either the natural chromatophore or a reconstituted reaction center/phospholipid membrane. In this paper, the reconstituted membrane was used to describe the nature of cytochrome c binding to the reaction center, the location of bound cytochrome c in the membrane profile and the perturbation of the reaction center and phospholipid profile structures induced by cytochrome c binding. These structural studies utilized the combined techniques of X-ray and neutron diffraction.  相似文献   

13.
The nucleotide sequence of the puf operon, which contains the genes encoding the B870 light-harvesting protein and the reaction center complex of the purple photosynthetic bacterium, Rhodovulum sulfidophilum, was determined. The operon, which consisted of six genes, pufQ, pufB, pufA, pufL, pufM, and pufC, is a new variety in photosynthetic bacteria in the sense that pufQ and pufC coexist. The amino acid sequence of the cytochrome subunit of the reaction center deduced from the pufC sequence revealed that this cytochrome contains only three possible heme-binding motifs; the heme-1-binding motif of the corresponding tetraheme cytochrome subunits was not present. This is the first exception of the "tetraheme" cytochrome family in purple bacteria and green filamentous bacteria. The pufC sequence also revealed that the sixth axial ligands to heme-1 and heme-2 irons were not present in the cytochrome either. This cytochrome was actually detected in membrane preparation as a 43-kDa protein and shown to associate functionally with the photosynthetic reaction center as the immediate electron donor to the photo-oxidized special pair of bacteriochlorophyll. This new cytochrome should be useful for studies on the role of each heme in the cytochrome subunit of the bacterial reaction center and the evolution of proteins in photosynthetic electron transfer systems.  相似文献   

14.
15.
During photosynthesis light energy is converted into energy of chemical bonds through a series of electron and proton transfer reactions. Over the first ultrafast steps of photosynthesis that take place in the reaction center (RC) the quantum efficiency of the light energy transduction is nearly 100%. Compared to the plant and cyanobacterial photosystems, bacterial RCs are well studied and have relatively simple structure. Therefore they represent a useful model system both for manipulating of the electron transfer parameters to study detailed mechanisms of its separate steps as well as to investigate the common principles of the photosynthetic RC structure, function, and evolution. This review is focused on the research papers devoted to chemical and genetic modifications of the RCs of purple bacteria in order to study principles and mechanisms of their functioning. Investigations of the last two decades show that the maximal rates of the electron transfer reactions in the RC depend on a number of parameters. Chemical structure of the cofactors, distances between them, their relative orientation, and interactions to each other are of great importance for this process. By means of genetic and spectral methods, it was demonstrated that RC protein is also an essential factor affecting the efficiency of the photochemical charge separation. Finally, some of conservative water molecules found in RC not only contribute to stability of the protein structure, but are directly involved in the functioning of the complex.  相似文献   

16.
The prototype reaction center may have used protoporphyrin-IX associated with small peptides to transfer electrons or protons across the primitive cell membrane. The precursor of all contemporary reaction centers contained chlorophylla molecules as both primary electron donor and initial electron acceptor and an Fe-S center as secondary acceptor (RC-1 type). The biosynthetic pathway for chlorophylla evolved along with the evolution of a better organized reaction center associated with cytochromes and quinones in a primitive cyclic electron transport system. This reaction center probably functioned initially in photoassimilation, but was easily adapted to CO2 fixation using H2 and H2S as reductants. During this phase bacteriochlorophyllg may have evolved from chlorophylla in response to competition for light, and thereby initiated the gram-positive line of eubacteria. A second reaction center (RC-2) evolved from RC-1 between 3.5 and 2.5 Ga ago in response to the competition for reductants for CO2 fixation. The new organism containing RC-2 in series with RC-1 would have been able to use poor reducing agents such as the abundant aqueous ferrous ion in place of H2 and H2S. This new organism is proposed to be the common ancestor of all phototrophic eubacteria except those related to the gram-positive bacteria. All organisms containing bacteriochlorophylla lost either RC-1 or RC-2, while those organisms containing chlorophylla (ancestors of cyanobacteria) added a water-splitting enzyme to RC-2 between 3.0 and 2.5 Ga ago in order to use H2O in place of hydrated ferrous ion as electron donor for autotrophic photosynthesis.  相似文献   

17.
The photosynthetic reaction center (RC) is the first membrane protein whose three-dimensional structure was revealed at the atomic level by X-ray crystallograph more than fifteen years ago. Structural information about RC made a great contribution to the understanding of the reaction mechanism of the complicated membrane protein complex. High-resolution structures of RCs from three photosynthetic bacteria are now available, namely, those from two mesophilic purple non-sulfur bacteria, Blastochloris viridis and Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and that from a thermophilic purple sulfur bacterium, Thermochromatium tepidum. In addition, a variety of structural studies, mainly by X-ray crystallography, are still being performed to give more detailed insight into the reaction mechanism of this membrane protein. This review deals with structural studies of bacterial RC complexes, and a discussion about the electron transfer reaction between RCs and electron donors is the main focus out of several topics addressed by these structural studies. The structural data from three RCs and their electron donors provided reliable models for molecular recognition in the primary step of bacterial photosynthesis.  相似文献   

18.
《BBA》2020,1861(12):148285
The influence of transition metal binding on the charge storage ability of native bacterial reaction centers (BRCs) was investigated. Binding of manganous ions uniquely prevented the light-induced conformational changes that would yield to long lifetimes of the charge separated state and the drop of the redox potential of the primary electron donor (P). The lifetimes of the stable charge pair in the terminal conformations were shortened by 50-fold and 7-fold upon manganous and cupric ion binding, respectively. Nickel and zinc binding had only marginal effects. Binding of manganese not only prevented the drop of the potential of P/P+ but also elevated it by up to 117 mV depending on where the metal was binding. With variable conditions, facilitating either manganese binding or light-induced structural changes a controlled tuning of the potential of P/P+ in multiple steps was demonstrated in a range of ~200 mV without the need of a mutation or synthesis. Under the selected conditions, manganese binding was achieved without its photochemical oxidation thus, the energized but still native BRCs can be utilized in photochemistry that is not reachable with regular BRCs. A 42 Å long hydrophobic tunnel was identified that became obstructed upon manganese binding and its likely role is to deliver protons from the hydrophobic core to the surface during conformational changes.  相似文献   

19.
The addition of cryosolvents (glycerol, dimethylsulfoxide) to a water solution containing bacterial photosynthetic reaction centers changes the redox potential of the bacteriochlorophyll dimer, but does not affect the redox potential of the quinone primary acceptor. It has been shown that the change in redox potential can be produced by changes of the electrostatic interactions between cofactors and the local molecular environment modified by additives entered into the solution. The degree of influence of a solvent on the redox potential of various cofactors is determined by degree of availability of these cofactors for molecules of solvent, which depends on the arrangement of cofactors in the structure of reaction centers.  相似文献   

20.
A minimal kinetic model of the photocycle, including both quinone (Q-6) reduction at the secondary quinone-binding site and (mammalian) cytochrome c oxidation at the cytochrome docking site of isolated reaction centers from photosynthetic purple bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides, was elaborated and tested by cytochrome photooxidation under strong continuous illumination. The typical rate of photochemical excitation by a laser diode at 810 nm was 2.200 s-1, and the rates of stationary turnover of the reaction center (one-half of that of cytochrome photooxidation) were 600 +/- 70 s-1 at pH 6 and 400 +/- 50 s-1 at pH 8. The rate of turnover showed strong pH dependence, indicating the contribution of different rate-limiting processes. The kinetic limitation of the photocycle was attributed to the turnover of the cytochrome c binding site (pH < 6), light intensity and quinone/quinol exchange (6 < pH < 8), and proton-coupled second electron transfer in the quinone acceptor complex (pH > 8). The analysis of the double-reciprocal plot of the rate of turnover versus light intensity has proved useful in determining the light-independent (maximum) turnover rate of the reaction center (445 +/- 50 s-1 at pH 7.8).  相似文献   

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