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1.
Proton and electron transfer events in reaction centers (RCs) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides were investigated by site-directed mutagenesis of glutamic acid at position 212 and aspartic acid at 213 in the secondary quinone (QB) binding domain of the L subunit. These residues were mutated singly to the corresponding amides (mutants L212EQ and L213DN) and together to give the double mutant (L212EQ/L213DN). In the double mutant RCs, the rate of electron transfer from the primary (QA) to the secondary (QB) acceptor quinones is fast (tau approximately 300 microseconds) and is pH independent from pH 5 to 11. The rate of recombination between the oxidized primary donor, P+, and QB- is also pH independent and much slower (tau approximately 10 s) than in the wild type (Wt), indicating a significant stabilization of the QB- semiquinone. In the double mutant, and in L213DN mutant RCs at low pH, the P+QB- decay is suggested to occur significantly via a direct recombination rather than by repopulating the P+QA- state, as in the Wt. Comparison of the behavior of Wt and the three mutant RC types leads to the following conclusions: the pK of AspL213 in the Wt is approximately 4 for the QAQB state (pKQB) and approximately 5 for the QAQB-state (pKQB-); for GluL212, pKQB approximately 9.5 and pKQB- approximately 11. In L213DN mutant RCs, pKQB of GluL212 is less than or equal to 7, indicating that the high pK values of GluL212 in the Wt are due largely to electrostatic interaction with the ionized AspL213 which contributes a shift of at least 2.5 pH units. Transfer of the second electron and all associated proton uptake to form QBH2 is drastically inhibited in double mutant and L213DN mutant RCs. At pH greater than or equal to 8, the rates are at least 10(4)-fold slower than in Wt RCs. In L212EQ mutant RCs the second electron transfer and proton uptake are biphasic. The fast phase of the electron transfer is similar to that of the Wt, but the extent of rapid transfer is pH dependent, revealing the pH dependence of the equilibrium QA(-)QB- in equilibrium with QAQBH-. The estimated limits on the pK values--pKQA-QB-less than or equal to 7.3, pKQAQB2- greater than or equal to 10.4--are similar to those derived earlier for Wt RCs [Kleinfeld et al. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 809, 291-310] and may pertain to the quinone head group, per se.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
E G Alexov  M R Gunner 《Biochemistry》1999,38(26):8253-8270
Reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides were subjected to Monte Carlo sampling to determine the Boltzmann distribution of side-chain ionization states and positions and buried water orientation and site occupancy. Changing the oxidation states of the bacteriochlorophyll dimer electron donor (P) and primary (QA) and secondary (QB) quinone electron acceptors allows preparation of the ground (all neutral), P+QA-, P+QB-, P0QA-, and P0QB- states. The calculated proton binding going from ground to other oxidation states and the free energy of electron transfer from QA-QB to form QAQB- (DeltaGAB) compare well with experiment from pH 5 to pH 11. At pH 7 DeltaGAB is measured as -65 meV and calculated to be -80 meV. With fixed protein positions as in standard electrostatic calculations, DeltaGAB is +170 meV. At pH 7 approximately 0.2 H+/protein is bound on QA reduction. On electron transfer to QB there is little additional proton uptake, but shifts in side chain protonation and position occur throughout the protein. Waters in channels leading from QB to the surface change site occupancy and orientation. A cluster of acids (GluL212, AspL210, and L213) and SerL223 near QB play important roles. A simplified view shows this cluster with a single negative charge (on AspL213 with a hydrogen bond to SerL233) in the ground state. In the QB- state the cluster still has one negative charge, now on the more distant AspL210. AspL213 and SerL223 move so SerL223 can hydrogen bond to QB-. These rearrangements plus other changes throughout the protein make the reaction energetically favorable.  相似文献   

3.
Addition of azide fully restored the proton pump activity of defective bacteriorhodopsin (BR) mutant protein Asp96----Asn. The decay time of M of BR Asp96----Asn, the longest living intermediate, was decreased from 500 ms at pH 7.0 to approximately 1 ms under conditions of saturating azide concentrations. This decay was faster than the decay of M in the wild-type, where no such azide effect was detectable. Stationary photocurrents, measured with purple membranes immobilized and oriented in a polyacrylamide gel, increased upon addition of azide up to the level of the wild-type. Different small anions of weak acids restored the pump activity with decreasing affinity in the order: cyanate greater than azide greater than nitrite greater than formiate greater than acetate. The activation energy of the M decay in the mutant was higher in the presence (48 kJ/mol) than in the absence (27 kJ/mol) of 100 mM azide even though the absolute rate was dramatically increased by azide. This effect of azide is due to the substitution of a carboxamido group for a carboxylic group at position 96 which removes the internal proton donor and causes an increase in the entropy change of activation for proton transfer which is reversed by azide.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The mechanisms of proton conduction to the reduced secondary quinone in bacterial reaction centers were studied in wild-type and genetically modified reaction centers from Rhodobacter capsulatus. In the L212-213AA double mutant (L212Glu----Ala, L213Asp----Ala), reaction center function is severely altered. However, a photocompetent revertant of this strain which carries a third 'compensating' mutation, M231Arg----Leu, at about 15 A from the secondary quinone, displays the normal proton binding function of the reaction center. Furthermore, the apparent pK values of group(s) involved in the stabilization of the semiquinone anion are restored by that mutation. We conclude that L212Glu and L213Asp are not obligatory residues for proton donation to QB in Rb. capsulatus. We suggest that protons can be delivered to the QB site from the cytoplasm via a network of proton channels activated by compensatory mutations, possibly involving water molecules bound in the interior of the reaction center.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
The photoreduction of the secondary quinone acceptor QB in reaction centers (RCs) of the photosynthetic bacteria Rhodobacter (Rb.) capsulatus has been investigated by light-induced FTIR difference spectroscopy in 1H2O and 2H2O. The Q-B/QB FTIR spectra reflect reorganization of the protein upon electron transfer, changes of protonation state of carboxylic acid groups, and (semi)quinone-protein interactions. As expected from the conservation of most of the amino acids near QB in the RCs from Rb. capsulatus and Rb. sphaeroides, several protein and quinone IR bands are common to both spectra, e.g., the 1728 cm-1 band is assigned to proton uptake by a carboxylic acid residue, most probably Glu L212 as previously proposed for Rb. sphaeroides RCs. However, noticeable changes are observed at 1709 cm-1 (deprotonation of a Glu or Asp residue), 1674 and 1659 cm-1 (side chain and/or backbone), around 1540 cm-1 (amide II), and in the semiquinone absorption range. This FTIR study demonstrates that the environment of the secondary quinone in Rb. capsulatus is close but not identical to that in Rb. sphaeroides suggesting slight differences in the structural organization of side chains and/or ordered water molecules near QB.  相似文献   

9.
The reaction center (RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides captures light energy by electron transfer between quinones QA and QB, involving a conformational gating step. In this work, conformational states of D+*QB-* were trapped (80 K) and studied using EPR spectroscopy in native and mutant RCs that lack QA in which QB was reduced by the bacteriopheophytin along the B-branch. In mutant RCs frozen in the dark, a light induced EPR signal due to D+*QB-* formed in 30% of the sample with low quantum yield (0.2%-20%) and decayed in 6 s. A small signal with similar characteristics was also observed in native RCs. In contrast, the EPR signal due to D+*QB-* in mutant RCs illuminated while freezing formed in approximately 95% of the sample did not decay (tau >107 s) at 80 K (also observed in the native RC). In all samples, the observed g-values were the same (g = 2.0026), indicating that all active QB-*'s were located in a proximal conformation coupled with the nonheme Fe2+. We propose that before electron transfer at 80 K, the majority (approximately 70%) of QB, structurally located in the distal site, was not stably reducible, whereas the minority (approximately 30%) of active configurations was in the proximal site. The large difference in the lifetimes of the unrelaxed and relaxed D+*QB-* states is attributed to the relaxation of protein residues and internal water molecules that stabilize D+*QB-*. These results demonstrate energetically significant conformational changes involved in stabilizing the D+*QB-* state. The unrelaxed and relaxed states can be considered to be the initial and final states along the reaction coordinate for conformationally gated electron transfer.  相似文献   

10.
Numerical calculations of the free energy of the first electron transfer in genetically modified reaction centers from Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides and Rb. capsulatus were carried out from pH 5 to 11. The multiconformation continuum electrostatics (MCCE) method allows side chain, ligand, and water reorientation to be embedded in the calculations of the Boltzmann distribution of cofactor and amino acid ionization states. The mutation sites whose effects have been modeled are L212 and L213 (the L polypeptide) and two in the M polypeptide, M43(44) and M231(233) in Rb. capsulatus (Rb. sphaeroides). The results of the calculations were compared to the experimental data, and very good agreement was found especially at neutral pH. Each mutation removes or introduces ionizable residues, but the protein maintains a net charge close to that in native RCs through ionization changes in nearby residues. This reduces the effect of mutation and makes the changes in state free energy smaller than would be found in a rigid protein. The state energy of QA-QB and QAQB- states have contributions from interactions among the residues as well as with the quinone which is ionized. For example, removing L213Asp, located in the QB pocket, predominantly changes the free energy of the QA-QB state, where the Asp is ionized in native RCs rather than the QAQB- state, where it is neutral. Side chain, hydroxyl, and water rearrangements due to each of the mutations have also been calculated showing water occupancy changes during the QA- to QB electron transfer.  相似文献   

11.
Breton J 《Biochemistry》2007,46(15):4459-4465
In the reaction center (RC) of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, two ubiquinone molecules, QA and QB, play a pivotal role in the conversion of light energy into chemical free energy by coupling electron transfer to proton uptake. In native RCs, the transfer of an electron from QA to QB takes place in the time range of 5-200 micros. On the basis of time-resolved FTIR step-scan measurements in native RCs, a new and unconventional mechanism has been proposed in which QB- formation precedes QA- oxidation [Remy, A., and Gerwert, K. (2003) Nat. Struct. Biol. 10, 637-644]. The IR signature of the proposed transient intermediary electron acceptor (denoted X) operating between QA and QB has been recently measured by the rapid-scan technique in the DN(L210) mutant RCs, in which the QA to QB electron transfer is slowed 8-fold compared to that in native RCs. This IR signature has been reported as a difference spectrum involving states X+, X, QA, and QA- [Hermes, S., et al. (2006) Biochemistry 45, 13741-13749]. Here, we report the steady-state FTIR difference spectra of the photoreduction of either QA or QB measured in both native and DN(L210) mutant RCs in the presence of potassium ferrocyanide. In these spectra, the CN stretching marker modes of ferrocyanide and ferricyanide allow the extent of the redox reactions to be quantitatively compared and are used for a precise normalization of the QA-/QA and QB-/QB difference spectra. The calculated QA- QB/QA QB- double-difference spectrum in DN(L210) mutant RCs is closely equivalent to the reported QA- X+/QA X spectrum in the rapid-scan measurement. We therefore conclude that species X+ and X are spectrally indistinguishable from QB and QB-, respectively. Further comparison of the QA- QB/QA QB- double-difference spectra in native and DN(L210) RCs also allows the possibility that QB- formation precedes QA- reoxidation to be ruled out for native RCs.  相似文献   

12.
R J Debus  G Feher  M Y Okamura 《Biochemistry》1986,25(8):2276-2287
Reaction centers (RCs) from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides R-26.1 were depleted of Fe by a simple procedure involving reversible dissociation of the H subunit. The resulting intact Fe-depleted RCs contained 0.1-0.2 Fe per RC as determined from atomic absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Fe-depleted RCs that have no metal ion occupying the Fe site differed from native RCs in the following respects: (1) the rate of electron transfer from QA- to QB exhibited nonexponential kinetics with the majority of RCs having a rate constant slower by only a factor of approximately 2, (2) the efficiency of light-induced charge separation (DQA----D+QA-) produced by a saturating flash decreased to 63%, and (3) QA appeared readily reducible to QA2-. Various divalent metal ions were subsequently incorporated into the Fe site. The electron transfer characteristics of Fe-depleted RCs reconstituted with Fe2+, Mn2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+, and Zn2+ were essentially the same as those of native RCs. These results demonstrate that neither Fe2+ nor any divalent metal ion is required for rapid electron transfer from QA- to QB. However, the presence of a metal ion in the Fe site is necessary to establish the characteristic, native, electron-transfer properties of QA. The lack of a dominant role of Fe2+ or other divalent metals in the observed rate of electron transfer from QA- to QB suggests that a rate-limiting step (for example, a protonation event or a light-induced structural change) precedes electron transfer.  相似文献   

13.
In the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the first electron transfer to the secondary quinone acceptor Q(B) is coupled to the protonation of Glu-L212, located approximately 5 A from the center of Q(B). Upon the second electron transfer to Q(B), Glu-L212 is involved in fast proton delivery to the reduced Q(B). Since Asp-L210 and Asp-M17 play an important role in the proton transfer to the Q(B) site [Paddock, M. L., Adelroth, P., Chang, C., Abresch, E. C., Feher, G., and Okamura, M. Y. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 6893-6902], we investigated the effects of replacing one or both Asp residues with Asn on proton uptake by Glu-L212 using FTIR difference spectroscopy. Upon the first electron transfer to Q(B), the amplitude of the proton uptake by Glu-L212 at pH 8 is increased in the single and double mutant RCs, as is evident from the larger intensity (by 35-55%) of the carboxylic acid band at 1727 cm(-1) in the Q(B)(-)/Q(B) difference spectra of mutant RCs, compared to that at 1728 cm(-1) in native RCs. This implies that the extent of ionization of Glu-L212 in the Q(B) ground state is greater in the mutants than in native RCs and that Asp-M17 and Asp-L210 are at least partially ionized near neutral pH in native RCs. In addition, no changes in the protonation state or the environment of these two residues are detected upon Q(B) reduction. The absence of the 1727 cm(-1) signal in all of the RCs lacking Glu-L212, confirms that the positive band at 1728-1727 cm(-1) probes the protonation of Glu-L212 in native and mutant RCs.  相似文献   

14.
In reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides, site-directed mutagenesis has implicated several acidic residues in the delivery of protons to the secondary quinone (Q(B)) during reduction to quinol. In a double mutant (Asp(L210) --> Asn + Asp(M17) --> Asn) that is severely impaired in proton transfer capability over a wide pH range, proton transfer was "rescued" by added weak acids. For low pK(a) acids the total concentration of salt required near neutral pH was high. The ionic strength effect of added salts stimulated the rate of proton-coupled electron transfer at pH < 7, but decreased it at pH > 7.5, indicating an effective isoelectric point between these limits. In this region, a substantial rate enhancement by weak acids was clearly evident. A Br?nsted plot of activity versus pK(a) of the rescuing acids was linear, with a slope of -1, and extrapolated to a diffusion-limited rate at pK(a)(app) approximately 1. However, the maximum rate at saturating concentrations of acid did not correlate with pK(a), indicating that the acid and anion species compete for binding, both with weak affinity. This model predicts that pK(a)(app) corresponds to a true pK(a) = 4-5, similar to that for a carboxylic acid or Q(B)(-), itself. Only rather small, neutral acids were active, indicating a need to access a small internal volume, suggested to be a proton channel to the Q(B) domain. However, the on-rates were near the diffusion limit. The implications for intraprotein proton transfer pathway design are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetics of light-induced electron transfer in reaction centers (RCs) from the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides were studied in the presence of the detergent lauryldimethylamine-N-oxide (LDAO). After the light-induced electron transfer from the primary donor (P) to the acceptor quinone complex, the dark re-reduction of P+ reflects recombination from the reduced acceptor quinones, QA- or QB-. The secondary quinone, QB, which is loosely bound to the RC, determines the rate of this process. Electron transfer to QB slows down the return of the electron to P+, giving rise to a slow phase of the recovery kinetics with time tau P approximately 1 s, whereas charge recombination in RCs lacking QB generates a fast phase with time tau AP approximately 0.1 s. The amount of quinone bound to RC micelles can be reduced by increasing the detergent concentration. The characteristic time of the slow component of P+ dark relaxation, observed at low quinone content per RC micelle (at high detergent concentration), is about 1.2-1.5 s, in sharp contrast to expectations from previous models, according to which the time of the slow component should approach the time of the fast component (about 0.1 s) when the quinone concentration approaches zero. To account for this large discrepancy, a new quantitative approach has been developed to analyze the kinetics of electron transfer in isolated RCs with the following key features: 1) The exchange of quinone between different micelles (RC and detergent micelles) occurs more slowly than electron transfer from QB- to P+; 2) The exchange of quinone between the detergent "phase" and the QB binding site within the same RC micelle is much faster than electron transfer between QA- and P+; 3) The time of the slow component of P+ dark relaxation is determined by (n) > or = 1, the average number of quinones in RC micelles, calculated only for those RC micelles that have at least one quinone per RC (in excess of QA). An analytical function is derived that relates the time of the slow component of P+ relaxation, tau P, and the relative amplitude of the slow phase. This provides a useful means of determining the true equilibrium constant of electron transfer between QA and QB (LAB), and the association equilibrium constant of quinone binding at the QB site (KQ+). We found that LAB = 22 +/- 3 and KQ = 0.6 +/- 0.2 at pH 7.5. The analysis shows that saturation of the QB binding site in detergent-solubilized RCs is difficult to achieve with hydrophobic quinones. This has important implications for the interpretation of apparent dependencies of QB function on environmental parameters (e.g. pH) and on mutational alterations. The model accounts for the effects of detergent and quinone concentration on electron transfer in the acceptor quinone complex, and the conclusions are of general significance for the study of quinone-binding membrane proteins in detergent solutions.  相似文献   

16.
A three-dimensional model of the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 was generated based on homology with the anoxygenic purple bacterial photosynthetic reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodopseudomonas viridis, for which the X-ray crystallographic structures are available. The model was constructed with an alignment of D1 and D2 sequences with the L and M subunits of the bacterial reaction center, respectively, and by using as a scaffold the structurally conserved regions (SCRs) from bacterial templates. The structurally variant regions were built using a novel sequence-specific approach of searching for the best-matched protein segments in the Protein Data Bank with the "basic local alignment search tool" (Altschul SF, Gish W, Miller W, Myers EW, Lipman DJ, 1990, J Mol Biol 215:403-410), and imposing the matching conformational preference on the corresponding D1 and D2 regions. The structure thus obtained was refined by energy minimization. The modeled D1 and D2 proteins contain five transmembrane alpha-helices each, with cofactors (4 chlorophylls, 2 pheophytins, 2 plastoquinones, and a non-heme iron) essential for PSII primary photochemistry embedded in them. A beta-carotene, considered important for PSII photoprotection, was also included in the model. Four different possible conformations of the primary electron donor P680 chlorophylls were proposed, one based on the homology with the bacterial template and the other three on existing experimental suggestions in literature. The P680 conformation based on homology was preferred because it has the lowest energy. Redox active tyrosine residues important for P680+ reduction as well as residues important for PSII cofactor binding were analyzed. Residues involved in interprotein interactions in the model were also identified. Herbicide 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) was also modeled in the plastoquinone QB binding niche using the structural information available from a DCMU-binding bacterial reaction center. A bicarbonate anion, known to play a role in PSII, but not in anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria, was modeled in the non-heme iron site, providing a bidentate ligand to the iron. By modifying the previous hypothesis of Blubaugh and Govindjee (1988, Photosyn Res 19:85-128), we modeled a second bicarbonate and a water molecule in the QB site and we proposed a hypothesis to explain the mechanism of QB protonation mediated by bicarbonate and water. The bicarbonate, stabilized by D1-R257, donates a proton to QB2- through the intermediate of D1-H252; and a water molecule donates another proton to QB2-. Based on the discovery of a "water transport channel" in the bacterial reaction center, an analogous channel for transporting water and bicarbonate is proposed in our PSII model. The putative channel appears to be primarily positively charged near QB and the non-heme iron, in contrast to the polarity distribution in the bacterial water transport channel. The constructed model has been found to be consistent with most existing data.  相似文献   

17.
Electron transfer between the primary and secondary quinones (Q(A), Q(B)) in the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center (bRC) is coupled with proton uptake at Q(B). The protons are conducted from the cytoplasmic side, probably with the participation of two water channels. Mutations of titratable residues like Asp-L213 to Asn (inhibited mutant) or the double mutant Glu-L212 to Ala/Asp-L213 to Ala inhibit these electron transfer-coupled proton uptake events. The inhibition of the proton transfer (PT) process in the single mutant can be restored by a second mutation of Arg-M233 to Cys or Arg-H177 to His (revertant mutant). These revertant mutants shed light on the location of the main proton transfer pathway of wild type bRC. In contrast to the wild type and inhibited mutant bRC, the revertant mutant bRC showed notable proton uptake at Glu-H173 upon formation of the Q(B)- state. In all of these mutants, the pK(a) of Asp-M17 decreased by 1.4-2.4 units with respect to the wild type bRC, whereas a significant pK(a) upshift of up to 5.8 units was observed at Glu-H122, Asp-H170, Glu-H173, and Glu-H230 in the revertant mutants. These residues belonging to the main PT pathway are arranged along water channel P1 localized mainly in subunit H. bRC possesses subunit H, which has no counterpart in photosystem II. Thus, bRC may possess alternative PT pathways involving water channels in subunit H, which becomes active in case the main PT pathway is blocked.  相似文献   

18.
Gerencsér L  Maróti P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(6):1850-1860
Transition metal ions bind to the reaction center (RC) protein of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides and slow the light-induced electron and proton transfer to the secondary quinone, Q(B). We studied the properties of the metal ion-RC complex by measuring the pH dependence of the dissociation constant and the stoichiometry of proton release upon ligand formation. We investigated the mechanism of inhibition by measuring the stoichiometry and kinetics of flash-induced proton binding, the transfer of (first and second) electrons to Q(B), and the rate of steady-state turnover of the RC in the absence and presence of Cd(2+) and Ni(2+) on a wide pH range. The following results were obtained. (1) The complexation of transition metal ions Cd(2+) and Ni(2+) with the bacterial RC showed strong pH dependence. This observation was explained by different (pH-dependent) states of the metal-ligand cluster: the complex formation was strong when the ligand (Asp and His residues) was deprotonated and was much weaker if the ligand was partly (or fully) protonated. A direct consequence of the model was the pH-dependent proton release upon complexation. (2) The retardation of transfer of electrons and protons to Q(B) was also strongly pH-dependent. The effect was large in the neutral pH range and decreased toward the acidic and alkaline pH values. (3) Steady-state turnover measurements indicated that the rate of the second proton transfer was much less inhibited than that of the first one, which became the rate-limiting step in continuous turnover of the RC. (4) Sodium azide partly recovered the proton transfer rate. The effect is not due to removal of the bound metal ion by azide but probably by formation of a proton-transporting azide network similarly as water molecules may build up proton pathways. (5) We argue that the inhibition comes mainly from pK(a) shifts of key protonatable residues that control the proton transfer along the H-bond network to Q(B). The electrostatic interaction between the metal ion and these residues may result in acidic pK(a) shifts between 1.5 and 2.0 that account for the observed retardation of the electron and proton transfer.  相似文献   

19.
Photosystem II of oxygen-evolving organisms exhibits a bicarbonate-reversible formate effect on electron transfer between the primary and secondary acceptor quinones, QA and QB. This effect is absent in the otherwise similar electron acceptor complex of purple bacteria, e.g., Rhodobacter sphaeroides. This distinction has led to the suggestion that the iron atom of the acceptor quinone complex in PS II might lack the fifth and sixth ligands provided in the bacterial reaction center (RC) by a glutamate residue at position 234 of the M-subunit in Rb. sphaeroides RCs (M232 in Rps. viridis). By site-directed mutagenesis we have altered GluM234 in RCs from Rb. sphaeroides, replacing it with valine, glutamine and glycine to form mutants M234EV, M234EQ and M234EG, respectively. These mutants grew competently under phototrophic conditions and were tested for the formate-bicarbonate effect. In chromatophores there were no detectable differences between wild type (Wt) and mutant M234EV with respect to cytochrome b-561 reduction following a flash, and no effect of bicarbonate depletion (by incubation with formate). In isolated RCs, several electron transfer activities were essentially unchanged in Wt and M234EV, M234EQ and M234EG mutants, and no formate-bicarbonate effect was observed on: (a) the fast or slow phases of recovery of the oxidized primary donor (P+) in the absence of exogenous donor, i.e., the recombination of P+Q-A or P+Q-B, respectively; (b) the kinetics of electron transfer from Q-A to QB; or (c) the flash dependent oscillations of semiquinone formation in the presence of donor to P+ (QB turnover). The absence of a formate-bicarbonate effect in these mutants suggests that GluM234 is not responsible for the absence of the formate-bicarbonate effect in Wt bacterial RCs, or at least that other factors must be taken into account. The mutant RCs were also examined for the fast primary electron transfer along the active (A-)branch of the pigment chain, leading to reduction of QA. The kinetics were resolved to reveal the reduction of the monomer bacteriochlorophyll (tau = 3.5 ps), followed by reduction of the bacteriopheophytin (tau = 0.9 ps). Both steps were essentially unaltered from the wild type. However, the rate of reduction of QA was slowed by a factor of 2 (tau = 410 +/- 30 and 47 +/- 30 ps for M234EQ and M234EV, respectively, compared to 220 ps in the wild type).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
In the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) from the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, proton-coupled electron-transfer reactions occur at the secondary quinone (QB) site. Involved in the proton uptake steps are carboxylic acids, which have characteristic infrared vibrations in the 1770-1700 cm-1 spectral range that are sensitive to 1H/2H isotopic exchange. With respect to the native RC, a novel protonation pattern for carboxylic acids upon QB photoreduction has been identified in the Glu-L212 --> Asp/Asp-L213 --> Glu mutant RC using light-induced FTIR difference spectroscopy (Nabedryk, E., Breton, J., Okamura, M. Y., and Paddock, M. L. (2004) Biochemistry 43, 7236-7243). These carboxylic acids are structurally close and have been implicated in proton transfer to reduced QB. In this work, we extend previous studies by measuring the pH dependence of the QB-/QB FTIR difference spectra of the mutant in 1H2O and 2H2O. Large pH dependent changes were observed in the 1770-1700 cm-1 spectral range between pH 8 and pH 4. The IR fingerprints of the protonating carboxylic acids upon QB- formation were obtained from the calculated double-difference spectra 1H2O minus 2H2O. These IR fingerprints are specific for each pH, indicative of the contribution of different titrating groups. In particular, the 1752 cm-1 signal indicates that Glu-L213 protonates upon QB- formation at pH >or= 5, whereas the 1746 cm-1 signal indicates protonation of Asp-L212 even at pH 4. An unidentified carboxylic acid absorbing at approximately 1765 cm-1 could be the proton donor between pH 8 and 5. The observation that in the swap mutant there are several uniquely behaving carboxylic acids shows that electrostatic interactions occurring between them are sufficiently modified from the native RC to reveal their IR signatures.  相似文献   

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