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1.
J.C. Romijn  J. Amesz 《BBA》1976,423(2):164-173
Light-induced absorbance changes were measured at low temperatures in reaction center preparations from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. Absorbance difference spectra measured at 100 °K show that ubiquinone is photoreduced at this temperature, both by continuous light and by a short actinic flash. The reduction occurred with relatively high efficiency. These results give support to the idea that ubiquinone is involved in the primary photochemical reaction in Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. Reduction of ubiquinone was accompanied by a shift of the infrared absorption band of bacteriopheophytin.The rate of decay of the primary photoproducts (P+870 and ubisemiquinone) appeared to be approximately independent of temperature below 180 °K and above 270 °K; in the region between 180 and 270 °K it increased with decreasing temperature. The rate of decay was not affected by o-phenanthroline. Secondary reactions were inhibited by lowering the temperature.The light-induced absorbance changes were inhibited by chaotropic agents, like thiocyanate and perchlorate. It was concluded that these agents lower the efficiency of the primary photoconversion. The kinetics indicated that the degree of inhibition was not the same for all reaction centers. The absorption spectrum of the photoconverted reaction centers appeared to be somewhat modified by thiocyanate.  相似文献   

2.
Electron transfer between purified reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides and exogenous ubiquinone has been studied in the presence of electron donors by measurements of light-induced absorbance changes following a sequence of short actinic light flashes. Each odd flash promotes the formation of a molecule of ubisemiquinone; after each even flash the semiquinone disappears and a molecule of the fully reduced quinone appears. We interpret these results by means of a model where a specialized molecule of ubiquinone is reduced by the primary electron acceptor in a one-electron transfer reaction after each flash, and is reoxidized by a molecule of the ubiquinone pool in a two-electron transfer reaction every two flashes.  相似文献   

3.
Single-photon counting techniques were used to measure the fluorescence decay from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides and Rhodospirillum rubrum chromatophores after excitation with a 25-ps, 600-nm laser pulse. Electron transfer was blocked beyond the initial radical-pair state (PF) by chemical reduction of the quinone that serves as the next electron acceptor. Under these conditions, the fluorescence decays with multiphasic kinetics and at least three exponential decay components are required to describe the delayed fluorescence. Weak magnetic fields cause a small increase in the decay time of the longest component. The components of the delayed fluorescence are similar to those found previously with isolated reaction centers. We interpret the multi-exponential decay in terms of two small (0.01-0.02 eV) relaxations in the free energy of PF, as suggested previously for reaction centers. From the initial amplitudes of the delayed fluorescence, it is possible to calculate the standard free-energy difference between the earliest resolved form of PF and the excited singlet state of the antenna complexes in R. rubrum strains S1 and G9. The free-energy gap is found to be about 0.10 eV. It also is possible to calculate the standard free-energy difference between PF and the excited singlet state of the reaction center bacteriochlorophyll dimer (P). Values of 0.17 to 0.19 eV were found in both R. rubrum strains and also in Rps. sphaeroides strain 2.4.1. This free-energy gap agrees well with the standard free-energy difference between PF and P determined previously for reaction centers isolated from Rps. sphaeroides strain R26. The temperature dependence of the delayed fluorescence amplitudes between 180 K and 295 K is qualitatively different in isolated reaction centers and chromatophores. However, the temperature dependence of the calculated standard free-energy difference between P* and PF is similar in reaction centers and chromatophores of Rps. sphaeroides. The different temperature dependence of the fluorescence amplitudes in reaction centers and chromatophores arises because the free-energy difference between P* and the excited antenna is dominated by the entropy change associated with delocalization of the excitation in the antenna. We conclude that the state PF is similar in isolated reaction centers and in the intact photosynthetic membrane. Chromatophores from Rps. sphaeroides strain R-26 exhibit an anomalous fluorescence component that could reflect heterogeneity in their antenna.  相似文献   

4.
Light-induced electric current and potential responses have been measured across planar phospholipid membranes containing reaction centers from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. Under conditions in which the reaction centers are restricted to a single electron turnover, the responses can be correlated with the light-induced electron transfer reactions associated with the reaction center. The results indicate that electron transfer from the bacteriochlorophyll dimer to the primary ubiquinone molecule, and from ferrocytochrome c to the oxidized dimer occur in series across the planar membrane. Electron transfer from the primary to secondary ubiquinone molecule is not electrogenic.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of the charge recombination D+QA-----DQA was used to probe the protonation of the primary acceptor in reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, in which the native ubiquinone was replaced by anthraquinone. We found that QA- is stabilized by the rapid (t less than 10(-2) s) binding of a proton, with a pK of 9.8. The distance between QA- and the proton binding site was estimated to be larger than approximately 5 A.  相似文献   

6.
The time-course of fluorescence from reaction centers isolated from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides was measured using single-photon counting techniques. When electron transfer is blocked by the reduction of the electron-accepting quinones, reaction centers exhibit a relatively long-lived (delayed) fluorescence due to back reactions that regenerate the excited state (P*) from the transient radical-pair state, PF. The delayed fluorescence can be resolved into three components, with lifetimes of 0.7, 3.2 and 11 ns at 295 K. The slowest component decays with the same time-constant as the absorbance changes due to PF, and it depends on both temperature and magnetic fields in the same way that the absorbance changes do. The time-constants for the two faster components of delayed fluorescence are essentially independent of temperature and magnetic fields. The fluorescence also includes a very fast (prompt) component that is similar in amplitude to that obtained from unreduced reaction centers. The prompt fluorescence presumably is emitted mainly during the period before the initial charge-transfer reaction creates PF from P*. From the amplitudes of the prompt and delayed fluorescence, we calculate an initial standard free-energy difference between P* and PF of about 0.16 eV at 295 K, and 0.05 eV at 80 K, depending somewhat on the properties of the solvent. The multiphasic decay of the delayed fluorescence is interpreted in terms of relaxations in the free energy of PF with time, totalling about 0.05 eV at 295 K, possibly resulting from nuclear movements in the electron-carriers or the protein.  相似文献   

7.
Light-induced absorbance changes were measured at temperatures between --30 and --55 degrees C in chromatophores of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. Absorbance changes due to photooxidation of reaction center bacteriochlorophyll (P-870) were accompanied by a red shift of the absorption bands of a carotenoid. The red shift was inhibited by gramicidin D. The kinetics of P-870 indicated electron transport from the "primary" to a secondary electron acceptor. This electron transport was slowed down by lowering the temperature or increasing the pH of the suspension. Electron transport from soluble cytochrome c to P-870+ occurred in less purified chromatophore preparations. This electron transport was accompanied by a relatively large increase of the carotenoid absorbance change. This agrees with the hypothesis that P-870 is located inside the membrane, so that an additional membrane potential is generated upon transfer of an electron from cytochrome to P-870+. A strong stimulation of the carotenoid changes (more than 10-fold in some experiments) and pronounced band shifts of bacteriochlorophyll B-850 were observed upon illumination in the presence of artifical donor-acceptor systems. Reduced N-methylphenazonium methosulphate (PMS) and N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylene-diamine (TMPD) were fairly efficient donors, whereas endogenous ubiquinone and oxidized PMS acted as secondary acceptor. These results indicate the generation of large membrane potentials at low temperature, caused by sustained electron transport across the chromatophore membrane. The artificial probe, merocyanine MC-V did not show electrochromic band shifts at low temperature.  相似文献   

8.
Replacement of Fe2+ by Zn2+ in reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides enabled us to perform ENDOR (electron nuclear double resonance) experiments on the anion radicals of the primary and secondary ubiquinone acceptors (QA- and QB-. Differences between the QA and QB sites, hydrogen bonding to the oxygens, interactions with the protons of the proteins and some symmetry properties of the binding sites were deduced from an analysis of the ENDOR spectra.  相似文献   

9.
Chromatophores of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides strain R-26 were subjected to a series of brief flashes of light in the presence of diaminodurene as an electron donor. Odd-numbered flashes induced the reduction of ubiquinone to the anionic semiquinone, as indicated by absorbance changes near 450 nm. This reaction was not attended by proton binding. Even-numbered flashes caused disappearance of the semiquinone, presumably by conversion to the fully reduced form. This reaction was attended by proton uptake.  相似文献   

10.
The bacterial reaction center absorbance change at 450 nm (A-450) assigned to an anionic semiquinone, has been suggested as a candidate for the reduced form of the primary electron acceptor in bacterial photosynthesis. In reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides we have found kinetic discrepancies between the decay of A-450 and the recovery of photochemical competence. In addition, no proton uptake is measurable on the first turnover, although subsequent ones elicit one proton bound per electron. These results are taken to indicate that the acceptor reaction after a long dark period may be different for the first turnover than for subsequent ones. It is suggested that A-450 is still a likely candidate for the acceptor function but that in reaction centers, additional quinone may act as an adventitious primary acceptor when the "true" primary acceptor is reduced. Alternatively, the primary acceptor may act in a "ping-pong" fashion with respect to subsequent photoelectrons.  相似文献   

11.
Second derivative spectroscopy, computer curve analysis and Stepanov's equation show that the absorbance and fluorescence spectra of primary electron donor in reaction center of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides are splitting each into two asymmetric Gaussian components. Their absorption maxima at -196 degrees are 880 and 896 nm and emission maxima-906 and 923 nm, respectively. The absorption spectrum of Bchl-800 splits in the near infrared region into two bands with maxima at 790 and 803 nm. These components are ascribed to an exciton coupling in the two dimers of bacteriochlorophyll in the reaction center. The Qy transition moments of the two bacteriochlorophyll molecules of primary electron donor make an angle of 110 degrees and the angle between two Qy transitions of the pigment in Bchl-800 dimer is 150 degrees. The distance between the centers of chromophores in the dimers is estimated to be 8-11 A.  相似文献   

12.
Reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides strain R-26 were prepared with varying Fe and ubiquinone (Q) contents. The photooxidation of P-870 to P-870+ was found to occur with the same quantum yield in Fe-depleted reaction centers as in control samples. The kinetics of electron transfer from the initial electron acceptor (I) to Q also were unchanged upon Fe removal. We conclude that Fe has no measurable role in the primary photochemical reaction. The extent of secondary reaction from the first quinone acceptor (QA) to the second quinone acceptor (QB) was monitored by the decay kinetics of P-870+ after excitation of reaction centers with single flashes in the absence of electron donors, and by the amount of P-870 photooxidation that occurred on the second flash in the presence of electron donors. In reaction centers with nearly one iron and between 1 and 2 ubiquinones per reaction center, the amount of secondary electron transfer is proportional to the ubiquinone content above one per reaction center. In reaction centers treated with LiClO4 and o-phenanthroline to remove Fe, the amount of secondary reaction is decreased and is proportional to Fe content. Fe seems to be required for the secondary reaction. In reaction centers depleted of Fe by treatment with SDS and EDTA, the correlation between Fe content and secondary activity is not as good as that found using LiClO4. This is probably due in part to a loss of primary photochemical activity in samples treated with SDS; but the correlation is still not perfect after correction for this effect. The nature of the back reaction between P-870+ and Q-B was investigated using stopped flow techniques. Reaction centers in the P-870+ Q-B state decay with a 1-s half-time in both the presence and absence of o-phenanthroline, an inhibitor of electron transfer between Q-B and QB. This indicates that the back reaction between P-870+ and Q-A is direct, rather than proceeding via thermal repopulation of Q-A. The P-870+ Q-B state is calculated to lie at least 100 mV in free energy below the P-870+ Q-A state.  相似文献   

13.
Reaction centers were isolated from a carotenoidless mutant of Rhodopseudomonas gelatinosa by hydroxyapatite chromatography of purified chromatophores treated with lauryl dimethyl amine oxide. Absorption spectra and spectra of light-induced absorbance changes are similar to those of reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. The ratio of absorbance at 280 nm to that at 799 nm was 1.8 in the purest preparations. The extinction coefficient at the 799 nm absorption maximum was estimated to be 305 +/- 20 mM--1 . CM--1. The molecular weight based on protein and chromophore assays was found to be 1.5 . 10(5); the reaction center protein accounted for 6% of the total membrane protein. These reaction centers contained no cytochrome and showed just two components of apparent molecular weights 33 000 and 25 000 in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The chromatophores contained 42 molecules of antenna bacteriochlorophyll for each reaction center.  相似文献   

14.
Andre Vermeglio 《BBA》1977,459(3):516-524
Electron transfer between purified reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides and exogenous ubiquinone has been studied in the presence of electron donors by measurements of light-induced absorbance changes following a sequence of short actinic light flashes. Each odd flash promotes the formation of a molecule of ubisemiquinone; after each even flash the semiquinone disappears and a molecule of the fully reduced quinone appears.We interpret these results by means of a model where a specialized molecule of ubiquinone is reduced by the primary electron acceptor in a one-electron transfer reaction after each flash, and is reoxidized by a molecule of the ubiquinone pool in a two-electron transfer reaction every two flashes.  相似文献   

15.
The yield of the triplet state in reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides is dependent on the strength of an applied magnetic field. Reaction centers of the wild type that lack a functional iron complexed to the primary acceptor ubiquinone show a dependence similar to that of reaction centers of the mutant R-26 in which the iron-ubiquinone complex is intact. Apparently, the iron of the iron-ubiquinone complex is not essential to the effect, but it does exert an influence on its extent. Inchromatophores, the effect is about 2-fold decreased; the value of the magnetic field at which half the effect is found is about 500 G, in contrast to this value for reaction centers, which is 50--100 G. The magnetodependence of the triplet yield is discussed in terms of the Chemically Induced Dynamic Electron Polarization mechanism (CIDEP).  相似文献   

16.
The absorption changes that occur in reaction centers of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides during the initial photochemical electron-transfer reaction have been examined. Measurements were made between 740 and 1300 nm at 295 and 80 K by using a pulse-probe technique with 610-nm, 0.8-ps flashes. An excited singlet state of the bacteriochlorophyll dimer P* was found to give rise to stimulated emission with a spectrum similar to that determined previously for fluorescence from reaction centers. The stimulated emission was used to follow the decay of P*; its lifetime was 4.1 +/- 0.2 ps at 295 K and 2.2 +/- 0.1 ps at 80 K. Within the experimental uncertainty, the absorption changes associated with the formation of a bacteriopheophytin anion, Bph-, develop in concert with the decay of P* at both temperatures, as does the absorption increase near 1250 nm due to the formation of the cation of P, P+. No evidence was found for the formation of a bacteriochlorophyll anion, Bchl-, prior to the formation of Bph-. This is surprising, because in the crystal structure of the Rhodopseudomonas viridis reaction center [Deisenhofer, J., Epp, O., Miki, K., Huber, R., & Michel, H. (1984) J. Mol. Biol. 180, 385-398] a Bchl is located approximately in between P and the Bph. It is possible that Bchl- (or Bchl+) is formed but, due to kinetic or thermodynamic constraints, is never present at a sufficient concentration for us to observe. Alternatively, a virtual charge-transfer state, such as P+Bchl-Bph or PBchl+Bph-, could serve to lower the energy barrier for direct electron transfer between P* and the Bph.  相似文献   

17.
In reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides (formerly called Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides), light causes an electron-transfer reaction that forms the radical pair state (P+I-, or PF) from the initial excited singlet state (P) of a bacteriochlorophyll dimer (P). Subsequent electron transfer to a quinone (Q) produces the state P+Q-. Back electron transfer can regenerate P from P+Q-, giving rise to 'delayed' fluorescence that decays with approximately the same lifetime as P+Q-. The free-energy difference between P+Q- and P can be determined from the initial amplitude of the delayed fluorescence. In the present work, we extracted the native quinone (ubiquinone) from Rps. sphaeroides reaction centers, and replaced it by various anthraquinones, naphthoquinones, and benzoquinones. We found a rough correlation between the halfwave reduction potential (E1/2) of the quinone used for reconstitution (as measured polarographically in dimethylformamide) and the apparent free energy of the state P+Q- relatively to P. As the E1/2 of the quinone becomes more negative, the standard free-energy gap between P+Q- and P decreases. However, the correlation is quantitatively weak. Apparently, the effective midpoint potentials (Em) of the quinones in situ depend subtly on interactions with the protein environment in the reaction center. Using the value of the Em for ubiquinone determined in native reaction centers as a reference, and the standard free energies determined for P+Q- in reaction centers reconstituted with other quinones, the effective Em values of 12 different quinones in situ are estimated. In native reaction centers, or in reaction centers reconstituted with quinones that give a standard free-energy gap of more than about 0.8 eV between P+Q- and P*, charge recombination from P+Q- to the ground state (PQ) occurs almost exclusively by a temperature-insensitive mechanism, presumably electron tunneling. When reaction centers are reconstituted with quinones that give a free-energy gap between P+Q- and P* of less than 0.8 with quinones that give a free-energy gap between P+Q- and P* of less than 0.8 eV, part or all of the decay proceeds through a thermally accessible intermediate. There is a linear relationship between the log of the rate constant for the decay of P+Q- via the intermediate state and the standard free energy of P+Q-. The higher the free energy, the faster the decay. The kinetic and thermodynamic properties of the intermediate appear not to depend strongly on the quinone used for reconstitution, indicating that the intermediate is probably not simply an activated form of P+Q-.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The changes in the in vivo bacteriochlorophyll fluorescence induced by a Xenon flash at low temperatures (77--200 K) with the "primary" acceptor X chemically prereduced have been examined in whole cells of several species of photosynthetic bacteria which contain carotenoids absorbing in the visible part of the absorption spectrum. Two groups of species with different behaviour could be distinguished. In both cases a flash-induced rise of the fluorescence yield was observed with X prereduced at 77 k; as the temperature was increased the ratio of the maximum fluorescence (FM) and the basal fluorescence (F0) decreased and the kinetics of the decay of the high fluorescent state, as observed during the tail of the flash, apparently accelerated. Of the species examined the flash-induced changes in fluorescence-yield kinetics appeared to occur at higher temperatures in the members of one group (Chromatium vinosum, Rhodopseudomonas gelatinosa and Rhodopseudomonas palustris) than in the members of the other (Rhodopseudomonas palustris) than in the members of the other (Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides and Rhodospirillum rubrum). These effects are interpreted in terms of the light-induced generation of triplet states within the reaction centre. It is suggested that the species-dependent differences may reflect differences in the molecular organisation of the reaction centre. It was found that in all species the reaction centre carotenoid triplet does not act as a fluorescence quencher under these conditions.  相似文献   

19.
The dark recombination rate constant for the photooxidized bacteriochlorophyll (P) and reduced primary quinone acceptor (QA) in the photosynthetic reaction centers (RC) from purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides depends nonmonotonically on temperature. The time of this reaction is approximately 100 ms at 270-300 K and decreases as the temperature both increases and decreases beyond this temperature range. It is known that the dome-shaped dependence of the thermodynamic stability on temperature is an intrinsic feature of many proteins in solution. The experimental results on the nonmonotonous temperature dependence of P+ and QA- recombination rate constant are discussed in terms of general thermodynamic approaches. The dynamic properties of the network of hydrogen bonds that are involved in the relaxation processes accompanying the electron transport are considered as a regulatory factor of the efficiency of electron transfer.  相似文献   

20.
A specific carotenoid associated with reaction centers purified from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides shows an optical absorbance change in response to photochemical activity, at temperatures down to 35 K. The change corresponds to a bathochromic shift of 1 nm of each absorption band. The same change is induced by either chemical oxidation or photo-oxidation of reaction center bacteriochlorophyll (P-870). Reduction of the electron acceptor of the reaction center, either chemically or photochemically, does not cause a carotenoid absorbance change or modify a change already induced by oxidation of P-870. The change of the carotenoid spectrum can therefore be correlated with the appearance of positive charge in the reaction center. In these studies we observed that at 35 K the absorption band of reaction center bacteriochlorophyll near 600 nm exhibits a shoulder at 605 nm. The resolution into two components is more pronounced in the light-dark difference spectrum. This observation is consistent with our earlier finding, that the "special pair" of bacteriochlorophyll molecules that acts as photochemical electron donor has a dimer-like absorption spectrum in the near infrared.  相似文献   

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