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1.
A tetraheme cytochrome subunit bound to the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) of purple bacterium, Rubrivivax gelatinosus, interacts with two types of soluble electron donors, cytochromes c and high-potential iron-sulfur protein (HiPIP), at a binding domain in the vicinity of low-potential heme 1, the fourth heme from the special pair of bacteriochlorophyll. To clarify the mechanism of the interaction, the domain around heme 1 was examined using site-directed mutants that changed the surface charge in the region within 20 A from the heme edge. In the case of the interaction with soluble cytochrome c, a strong dependence on the sign of the introduced charge was observed in all mutants: positive charge inhibited the reaction rate, whereas additional negative charge accelerated it. This confirmed the electrostatic nature of the binding. Interaction with HiPIP was inhibited by a limited number of mutations at the close vicinity of heme 1, and no acceleration was observed (the effects of some mutations were independent of the sign of the introduced charge). The acidic residues which were critically important for the binding of cytochrome c showed much less contribution to the binding of HiPIP. The binding site for HiPIP appears to be mostly formed by uncharged and hydrophobic residues, occupying a significantly smaller area than the cytochrome-c-binding site. It is proposed that the docking of HiPIP to the RC in Rvi. gelatinosus is primarily controlled by hydrophobic contacts between protein surfaces, thus differing from the electrostatic mode of the RC-cytochrome c interaction.  相似文献   

2.
The photosynthetic cyclic electron transfer of the purple bacterium Rubrivivax gelatinosus, involving the cytochrome bc(1) complex and the reaction center, can be carried out via two pathways. A high potential iron-sulfur protein (HiPIP) acts as the in vivo periplasmic electron donor to the reaction center (RC)-bound cytochrome when cells are grown under anaerobic conditions in the light, while cytochrome c is the soluble electron carrier for cells grown under (8)aerobic conditions in the dark. A spontaneous reversion of R. gelatinosus C244, a defective mutant in synthesis of the RC-bound cytochrome by insertion of a Km(r) cassette leading to gene disruption with a slow growth rate, restores the normal photosynthetic growth. This revertant, designated C244-P1, lost the Km(r) cassette but synthesized a RC-bound cytochrome with an external 77-amino acid insertion derived from the cassette. We characterized the RC-bound cytochrome of this mutant by EPR, time-resolved optical spectroscopy, and structural analysis. We also investigated the in vivo electron transfer rates between the two soluble electron donors and this RC-bound cytochrome. Our results demonstrated that the C244-P1 RC-bound cytochrome is still able to receive electrons from HiPIP, but it is no longer reducible by cytochrome c(8). Combining these experimental and theoretical protein-protein docking results, we conclude that cytochrome c(8) and HiPIP bind the RC-bound cytochrome at two distinct but partially overlapping sites.  相似文献   

3.
A gene coding for the photosynthetic reaction center-bound cytochrome subunit, pufC, of Blastochloris viridis, which belongs to the alpha-purple bacteria, was introduced into Rubrivivax gelatinosus, which belongs to the beta-purple bacteria. The cytochrome subunit of B. viridis was synthesized in the R. gelatinosus cells, in which the native pufC gene was knocked out, and formed a chimeric reaction center (RC) complex together with other subunits of R. gelatinosus. The transformant was able to grow photosynthetically. Rapid photo-oxidization of the hemes in the cytochrome subunit was observed in the membrane of the transformant. The soluble electron carrier, cytochrome c(2), isolated from B. viridis was a good electron donor to the chimeric RC. The redox midpoint potentials and the redox difference spectra of four hemes in the cytochrome subunit of the chimeric RC were almost identical with those in the B. viridis RC. The cytochrome subunit of B. viridis seems to retain its structure and function in the R. gelatinosus cell. The chimeric RC and its mutagenesis system should be useful for further studies about the cytochrome subunit of B. viridis.  相似文献   

4.
The tetraheme cytochrome c subunit of the Rubrivivax gelatinosus reaction center was isolated in the presence of octyl beta-D-thioglucoside by ammonium sulfate precipitation and solubilization at pH 9 in a solution of Deriphat 160. Several biochemical properties of this purified cytochrome were characterized. In particular, it forms small oligomers and its N-terminal amino acid is blocked. In the presence or absence of diaminodurene, ascorbate and dithionite, different oxidation/reduction states of the isolated cytochrome were studied by absorption, EPR and resonance Raman spectroscopies. All the data show two hemes quickly reduced by ascorbate, one heme slowly reduced by ascorbate and one heme only reduced by dithionite. The quickly ascorbate-reduced hemes have paramagnetic properties very similar to those of the two low-potential hemes of the reaction center-bound cytochrome (gz = 3.34), but their alpha band is split with two components peaking at 552 nm and 554 nm in the reduced state. Their axial ligands did not change, being His/Met and His/His, as indicated by the resonance Raman spectra. The slowly ascorbate-reduced heme and the dithionite-reduced heme are assigned to the two high-potential hemes of the bound cytochrome. Their alpha band was blue-shifted at 551 nm and the gz values decreased to 2.96, although the axial ligations (His/Met) were conserved. It was concluded that the estimated 300 mV potential drop of these hemes reflected changes in their solvent accessibility, while the reduction in gz indicates an increased symmetry of their cooordination spheres. These structural modifications impaired the cytochrome's essential function as the electron donor to the photooxidized bacteriochlorophyll dimer of the reaction center. In contrast to its native state, the isolated cytochrome was unable to reduce efficiently the reaction center purified from a Rubrivivax gelatinosus mutant in which the tetraheme was absent. Despite the conformational changes of the cytochrome, its four hemes are still divided into two groups with a pair of low-potential hemes and a pair of high-potential hemes.  相似文献   

5.
A gene encoding the high-potential iron-sulfur protein (HiPIP) was cloned from the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rubrivivax gelatinosus. An insertional disruption of this gene by a kanamycin resistance cartridge resulted in a significant decrease in the growth rate under photosynthetic growth conditions. Flash-induced kinetic measurements showed that the rate of reduction of the photooxidized reaction center is greatly diminished in the mutant depleted in the HiPIP. On the other hand, mutants depleted in the low- and high-potential cytochromes c(8), the two other soluble electron carriers, which have been shown to donate an electron to the reaction center in Rvi. gelatinosus, showed growth rates similar to those of the wild type under both photosynthetic and respiratory growth conditions. It was concluded that HiPIP is the major physiological electron donor to the reaction center in Rvi. gelatinosus cells grown under photosynthetic conditions.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The tetraheme cytochrome subunits of the photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) in two species of purple bacteria, Rubrivivax gelatinosus and Blastochloris (Rhodopseudomonas) viridis, were compared in terms of their capabilities to bind different electron-donor proteins. The wild-type RCs from both species and mutated forms of R. gelatinosus RCs (with amino acid substitutions introduced to the binding domain for electron-donor proteins) were tested for their reactivity with soluble cytochromes and high potential iron-sulfur protein. Cytochromes from both species were good electron donors to the B. viridis RC and the R. gelatinosus RC. The reactivity in the R. gelatinosus RC showed a clear dependence on the polarity of the charges introduced to the binding domain, indicating the importance of the electrostatic interactions. In contrast, high potential iron-sulfur protein, presumed to operate according to the hydrophobic mechanism of binding, reacted significantly only with the R. gelatinosus RC. Evolutionary substitution of amino acids in a region of the binding domain on the cytochrome subunit surface probably caused the change in the principal mode of protein-protein interactions in the electron-transfer chains.  相似文献   

8.
Deletion of two of the major electron carriers, the reaction center-bound tetrahemic cytochrome and the HiPIP, involved in the light-induced cyclic electron transfer pathway of the purple photosynthetic bacterium, Rubrivivax gelatinosus, significantly impairs its anaerobic photosynthetic growth. Analysis on the light-induced absorption changes of the intact cells of the mutants shows, however, a relatively efficient photo-induced cyclic electron transfer. For the single mutant lacking the reaction center-bound cytochrome, we present evidence that the electron carrier connecting the reaction center and the cytochrome bc(1) complex is the High Potential Iron-sulfur Protein. In the double mutant lacking both the reaction center-bound cytochrome and the High Potential Iron-sulfur Protein, this connection is achieved by the high potential cytochrome c(8). Under anaerobic conditions, the halftime of re-reduction of the photo-oxidized primary donor by these electron donors is 3 to 4 times faster than the back reaction between P(+) and the reduced primary quinone acceptor. This explains the photosynthetic growth of these two mutants. The results are discussed in terms of evolution of the type II RCs and their secondary electron donors.  相似文献   

9.
Chen IP  Mathis P  Koepke J  Michel H 《Biochemistry》2000,39(13):3592-3602
The cytochrome (cyt) subunit of the photosynthetic reaction center from Rhodopseudomonas viridis contains four heme groups in a linear arrangement in the spatial order heme1, heme2, heme4, and heme3. Heme3 is the direct electron donor to the photooxidized primary electron donor (special pair, P(+)). This heme has the highest redox potential (E(m)) among the hemes in the cyt subunit. The E(m) of heme3 has been specifically lowered by site-directed mutagenesis in which the Arg residue at the position of 264 of the cyt was replaced by Lys. The mutation decreases the E(m) of heme3 from +380 to +270 mV, i.e., below that of heme2 (+320 mV). In addition, a blue shift of the alpha-band was found to accompany the mutation. The assignment of the lowered E(m) and the shifted alpha-band to heme3 was confirmed by spectroscopic measurements on RC crystals. The structure of the mutant RC has been determined by X-ray crystallography. No remarkable differences were found in the structure apart from the mutated residue itself. The velocity of the electron transfer (ET) from the tetraheme cyt to P(+) was measured under several redox conditions by following the rereduction of P(+) at 1283 nm after a laser flash. Heme3 donates an electron to P(+) with t(1/2) = 105 ns, i.e., faster than in the wild-type reaction center (t(1/2) = 190 ns), as expected from the larger driving force. The main feature is that a phase with t(1/2) approximately 2 micros dominates when heme3 is oxidized but heme2 is reduced. We conclude that the ET from heme2 to heme3 has a t(1/2) of approximately 2 micros, i.e., the same as in the WT, despite the fact that the reaction is endergonic by 50 meV instead of exergonic by 60 meV. We propose that the reaction kinetics is limited by the very uphill ET from heme2 to heme4, the DeltaG degrees of which is about the same (+230 meV) in both cases. The interpretation is further supported by measurements of the activation energy (216 meV in the wild-type, 236 meV in the mutant) and by approximate calculations of ET rates. Altogether these results demonstrate that the ET from heme2 to heme3 is stepwise, starting with a first very endergonic step from heme2 to heme4.  相似文献   

10.
High potential iron-sulfur protein (HiPIP), a small soluble redox protein, has been shown to serve in vivo as electron donor to the photosynthetic reaction centre (RC) in Rubrivivax gelatinosus [Biochemistry 34 (1995) 11736]. The results of time-resolved optical spectroscopy on membrane-fragments from this organism indicates that the photooxidized RC is re-reduced by HiPIP even in the absence of the soluble fraction. This implies that a significant fraction of HiPIP can firmly bind to the membrane in a conformation able to interact with the RCs. Salt treatment of the membrane-fragments abolishes these re-reduction kinetics, demonstrating the presence of HiPIP on the membrane due to association with the RC rather than due to simple trapping in hypothetical chromatophores. The existence of such a functional complex in membranes is confirmed and its structure further examined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) performed on membrane-fragments. Orientation-dependent EPR spectra of HiPIP were recorded on partially ordered membranes, oxidized either chemically or photochemically. Whereas hardly any preferential orientation of the HiPIP was seen in the chemically oxidised sample, a subpopulation of HiPIP showing specific orientations could be photooxidised. This fraction arises from the electron transfer complex between HiPIP and the RC.  相似文献   

11.
《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   

12.
The cytochrome subunit bound to the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) complex in Rhodovulum sulfidophilum lacks one heme-binding motif (CXXCH) out of four motifs found in other purple bacteria resulting in the absence of the most distal heme from the RC-core complex (S. Masuda et al., J. Biol. Chem. 274 (1999) 10795). Cytochrome c(2), which acts as the electron donor to the RC was purified, and its gene was cloned and sequenced. The redox midpoint potential of cytochrome c(2) was determined to be E(m)=357 mV. The photo-oxidation and re-reduction of purified cytochrome c(2) were observed in the presence of membrane preparations. Flash-induced photo-oxidation and re-reduction of the RC-bound cytochrome were also observed in intact cells. Despite the unusual nature of the RC-bound cytochrome subunit, the cyclic electron transfer system in Rdv. sulfidophilum was shown to be similar to those in other purple bacteria.  相似文献   

13.
In several strains of the photosynthetic bacterium Rubrivivax gelatinosus, the synthesis of a high midpoint potential cytochrome is enhanced 4-6-fold in dark aerobically grown cells compared with anaerobic photosynthetic growth. This observation explains the conflicting reports in the literature concerning the cytochrome c content for this species. This cytochrome was isolated and characterized in detail from Rubrivivax gelatinosus strain IL144. The redox midpoint potential of this cytochrome is +300 mV at pH 7. Its molecular mass, 9470 kDa, and its amino acid sequence, deduced from gene sequencing, support its placement in the cytochrome c8 family. The ratio of this cytochrome to reaction center lies between 0.8 and 1 for cells of Rvi. gelatinosus grown under dark aerobic conditions. Analysis of light-induced absorption changes shows that this high-potential cytochrome c8 can act in vivo as efficient electron donor to the photooxidized high-potential heme of the Rvi. gelatinosus reaction center.  相似文献   

14.
We describe in detail the conformations of the inhibitor stigmatellin in its free form and bound to the ubiquinone-reducing (Q(B)) site of the reaction center and to the ubiquinol-oxidizing (Q(o)) site of the cytochrome bc(1) complex. We present here the first structures of a stereochemically correct stigmatellin in complexes with a bacterial reaction center and the yeast cytochrome bc1 complex. The conformations of the inhibitor bound to the two enzymes are not the same. We focus on the orientations of the stigmatellin side-chain relative to the chromone head group, and on the interaction of the stigmatellin side-chain with these membrane protein complexes. The different conformations of stigmatellin found illustrate the structural variability of the Q sites, which are affected by the same inhibitor. The free rotation about the chi1 dihedral angle is an essential factor for allowing stigmatellin to bind in both the reaction center and the cytochrome bc1 pocket.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetics of electron transfer from reduced high-potential iron-sulfur protein (HiPIP) to the photooxidized tetraheme cytochrome c subunit (THC) bound to the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) from the purple sulfur bacterium Allochromatium vinosum were studied under controlled redox conditions by flash absorption spectroscopy. At ambient redox potential Eh = +200 mV, where only the high-potential (HP) hemes of the THC are reduced, the electron transfer from HiPIP to photooxidized HP heme(s) follows second-order kinetics with rate constant k = (4.2 +/- 0.2) 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) at low ionic strength. Upon increasing the ionic strength, k increases by a maximum factor of ca. 2 at 640 mM KCl. The role of Phe48, which lies on the external surface of HiPIP close to the [Fe4S4] cluster and presumably on the electron transfer pathway to cytochrome heme(s), was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of Phe48 with arginine, aspartate, and histidine completely prevents electron donation. Conversely, electron transfer is still observed upon substitution of Phe48 with tyrosine and tryptophan, although the rate is decreased by more than 1 order of magnitude. These results suggest that Phe48 is located on a key protein surface patch essential for efficient electron transfer, and that the presence of an aromatic hydrophobic residue on the putative electron-transfer pathway plays a critical role. This conclusion was supported by protein docking calculations, resulting in a structural model for the HiPIP-THC complex, which involves a docking site close to the LP heme farthest from the bacteriochlorophyll special pair.  相似文献   

16.
Flash-induced optical kinetics at room temperature of cytochrome (Cyt) c 551 and an Fe-S center (CFA/CFB) bound to a purified reaction center (RC) complex from the green sulfur photosynthetic bacterium Chlorobium tepidum were studied. At 551 nm, the flash-induced absorbance change decayed with a t 1/2 of several hundred ms, and the decay was accelerated by 1-methoxy-5-methylphenazinium methyl sulfate (mPMS). In the blue region, the absorbance change was composed of mPMS-dependent (Cyt) and mPMS-independent component (CFA/CFB) which decayed with a t 1/2 of 400–650 ms. Decay of the latter was effectively accelerated by benzyl viologen (Em –360 mV) and methyl viologen (–440 mV), and less effectively by triquat (–540 mV). The difference spectrum of Cyt c had negative peaks at 551, 520 and 420 nm, with a positive rise at 440 to 500 nm. The difference spectrum of CFA/CFB resembled P430 of PSI, and had a broad negative peak at 430435 nm.Abbreviations (B)Chl (bacterio)chlorophyll - Cyt cytochrome - FA, FB and FX iron-sulfur center A, B and X of Photosystem I - CFA, CFB and CFX FA-,FB- and FX-like Fe-S center of Chlorobium - mPMS 1-methoxy-5-methylphenazinium methyl sulfate - PSI Photosystem I - RC reaction center  相似文献   

17.
Cooperative interaction of the high-potential hemes (Ch) in the cytochrome subunit of the photosynthesizing bacterium Ectothiorhodospira shaposhnikovii was studied by comparing redox titration curves of the hemes under the conditions of pulse photoactivation inducing single turnover of electron-transport chain and steady-state photoactivation, as well as by analysis of the kinetics of laser-induced oxidation of cytochromes by reaction center (RC). A mathematical model of the processes of electron transfer in cytochrome-containing RC was considered. Theoretical analysis revealed that the reduction of one heme Ch facilitated the reduction of the other heme, which was equivalent to a 60 mV positive shift of the midpoint potential. In addition, reduction of the second heme Ch caused a three-to four-fold acceleration of the electron transfer from the cytochrome subunit to RC. Published in Russian in Biokhimiya, 2007, Vol. 72, No. 11, pp. 1540–1547.  相似文献   

18.
Mutation of a serine that forms a hydrogen bond to the iron-sulfur cluster of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein to a cysteine results in a respiratory-deficient yeast strain due to formation of iron-sulfur protein lacking the iron-sulfur cluster. The Rieske apoprotein lacking the iron-sulfur cluster is inserted into both monomers of the dimeric cytochrome bc(1) complex and processed to mature size, but the protein lacking iron-sulfur cluster is more susceptible to proteolysis. In addition, the protein environment of center P in one half of the dimer is affected by failure to insert the iron-sulfur cluster as indicated by the fact that only one molecule of myxothiazol can be bound to the cytochrome bc(1) dimer. Although the bc(1) complex lacking the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster cannot oxidize ubiquinol through center P, rates of reduction of cytochrome b by menaquinol through center N are normal. However, less cytochrome b is reduced through center N, and only one molecule of antimycin can be bound at center N in the bc(1) dimer lacking iron-sulfur cluster. These results indicate that failure to insert the [2Fe-2S] cluster impairs assembly of the Rieske protein into the bc(1) complex and that this interferes with proper assembly of both center P and center N in one half of the dimeric enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
The photosynthetic reaction center of Heliobacterium modesticaldum (HbRC) was isolated from membranes using n-dodecyl beta-D-maltopyranoside followed by sucrose density ultracentrifugation. The low-temperature EPR spectra of whole cells, isolated membranes, and HbRC complexes are similar, showing a single Fe-S cluster with g values of 2.067, 1.933, and 1.890 after illumination at 20 K, and a complex spectrum attributed to exchange interaction from two Fe-S clusters after illumination during freezing. The protein containing the Fe-S clusters was removed from the HbRC by washing it with 1.0 M NaCl and purified by ultrafiltration over a 30 kDa cutoff membrane. Analysis of the filtrate by SDS-PAGE showed a major band at approximately 8 kDa that was weakly stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue and strongly stained with silver. The optical spectrum of the oxidized Fe-S protein shows a maximum at 410 nm, and the EPR spectrum of the reduced Fe-S protein shows a complex set of resonances similar to those found in 2[4Fe-4S] ferredoxins. The HbRC core was purified by DEAE ion-exchange chromatography and resolved by SDS-PAGE. The purified HbRC was composed of a band at ca. 40 kDa, which is identified as PshA, and several additional proteins. The isolated Fe-S protein rebinds spontaneously to purified HbRC cores, and the light-induced EPR signals of the Fe-S clusters are recovered. The flash-induced kinetics of the HbRC complex show two kinetic phases at room temperature, one with a lifetime of 75 ms and the other with a lifetime of 15 ms. The 75 ms component is lost when the Fe-S protein is removed from the HbRC complex, and it is regained when the Fe-S protein is rebound to HbRC cores. Thus, the 75 ms kinetic phase is derived from recombination of a terminal Fe-S cluster with P798(+), and the 15 ms kinetic phase is derived from recombination with an earlier acceptor, probably F(X). We suggest that the bound Fe-S protein present in the HbRC be designated PshB.  相似文献   

20.
Under anaerobic conditions, intact cells of the purple sulfur bacterium Chromatium vinosum exhibit rapid photooxidation of the two low-potential hemes of the c-type cytochrome associated with the reaction center, after exposure to two short light flashes separated by a dark interval. Reduction of the photooxidized low-potential hemes is very slow under these conditions. On subsequent flashes, rapid photooxidation of a high-potential reaction center heme occurs and is followed by its rereduction on the millisecond time scale. Cells maintained under aerobic conditions exhibit the millisecond time scale reduction of the photooxidized high-potential heme after each flash. Cells grown autotrophically in the presence of Na(2)S and Na(2)S(2)O(3) appear to use the soluble [4Fe-4S]-containing protein, HiPIP, as the only direct electron donor to the reaction center heme under aerobic conditions. In contrast, cells grown in the presence of organic compounds, but in the absence of Na(2)S and Na(2)S(2)O(3), appear to use a soluble c-type cytochrome (most likely cytochrome c(8)) as the only electron donor to the reaction center heme under aerobic conditions. Cells grown autotrophically, in the presence of Na(2)S and Na(2)S(2)O(3), have a slightly higher ratio of HiPIP to cytochrome c(8) and a ratio of Rieske iron-sulfur protein to reaction center that is approximately one-half that of cells grown in the absence of Na(2)S and Na(2)S(2)O(3) but in the presence of organic compounds.  相似文献   

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