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1.
Amplitude characteristics and kinetics of laser-induced oxidation of high-potential cytochrome CH by a photosynthetic reaction center (RC) were investigated in Ectothiorhodospira shaposhnikovii chromatophore preparations of various humidity. It is shown that the diminuition of the amount of oxidized cytochrome and the decrease of the rate of the reaction on lowering the preparation humidity can be explained in terms of the concept of conformation-controlled electron transfer within the CH-RC complex. A model is suggested which predicts that the reversible transition of the complex from one conformational state which allows electron transfer ("contact" state) to the other in which the transfer is impossible ("non-contact" state) is the result of drying (or low temperature) induced changes in the electron tunnelling path in the region of "contact" of the cytochrome CH and RC protein globules.  相似文献   

2.
D M Arciero  C Balny  A B Hooper 《Biochemistry》1991,30(48):11466-11472
During oxidation of hydroxylamine, hydroxylamine oxidoreductase (HAO) transfers two electrons to tetraheme cytochrome c554 at rates sufficient to account for physiological rates of oxidation of ammonia to nitrite in Nitrosomonas europaea. Spectroscopic changes indicate that the two electrons are taken up by a high-potential pair of hemes (E degrees' = +47 mV) (one apparently high spin and one low spin). During single-turnover experiments, in which the reduction of oxidized cytochrome c554 by NH2OH-reduced HAO is monitored, one electron is taken up by the high-spin heme at a rate too fast to monitor directly (greater than 100 s-1) but which is inferred either by a loss of amplitude (relative to that observed under multiple-turnover conditions) or is slowed down by increasing ionic strength (greater than or equal to 300 mM KCl). The second electron is taken up by the low-spin heme at a 10-30-fold slower rate. The latter kinetics appear multiphasic and may be complicated by a transient oxidation of HAO due to the rapid transfer of the first electron into the high-spin heme of cytochrome c554. Under multiple-turnover conditions, a "slower" rate of reduction is observed for the high-spin heme of cytochrome c554 with a maximum rate constant of approximately 30 s-1, a value also obtained for the reduction, by NH2OH, of the cytochrome c554 high-spin heme within an oxidized HAO/c554 complex. Under these conditions, the maximum rate of reduction of the low-spin heme was approximately 11.0 s-1. Both rates decreased as the concentration of cytochrome c554 was increased above the concentration of HAO.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Flash-induced formation of an electric potential difference (delta psi) was monitored by a direct method in chromatophores associated with the collodion phospholipid membrane. In Rhodospirillum rubrum and Rhodopseudomonas sphaeriodes chromatophores, the kinetics of delta psi generation exhibit fast (tau less than or equal to 0.3 microseconds) and slow (tau congruent to 200 microseconds) phases, the latter observed in the presence of exogenous quinones. Comparison of the kinetic and potentiometric characteristics of the process with those of electron transport reactions suggests that the fast phase of delta psi rise is due to charge separation between the primary electron donor, P870, and primary electron acceptor QIFe; the slow phase, which is inhibited by o-phenanthroline, is due to electron donation from QIFe to the secondary acceptor, quinone QII. The kinetics of delta psi decay include components arising form the recombination of primary separated charges (tau congruent to 30 ms) and from the passive discharge of the membrane (tau congruent to 400 ms; tau congruent to 1400 ms). From a redox titration of the photo-induced electric signal and the photo-induced absorption changes of P870 at different pH meanings, the value of pK for the primary acceptor FeQI was found to be 7.4 in Rps. sphaeroides chromatophores. In Chromatium minutissimum, a phase ( tau congruent to 20 microseconds) was observed in addition to those seen in Rps. sphaeroids and R. rubrum which was explained by the reduction of P890+ from the high potential cytochrome c555. Possible distribution of the electron transport components in the chromatophore membrane are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
1. Chloroplasts suspended in a medium containing ethanediol and water (1 : 1, v/v) at -16 degrees C show light-induced proton uptake and subsequent dark efflux. Proton uptake in continuous light showed biphasic kinetics. 2. A 1 ms flash caused a single turnover of the photochemical centres at -16 degrees C. Under the same conditions 3H+ were taken up from the external medium in the presence of methyl viologen as electron acceptor. 3. The flash-induced proton uptake was exponential and monophasic with t1/2 = 3 s. The flash-induced proton release into the thylakoid interior was biphasic, with half-times of less than 0.1 s and 3 s. The fast phase represented approximately 30% of the total release and may be correlated with the oxidation of water. 4. The half-time of reduction of cytochrome f in the dark following illumination in the presence of 2 mM NH4Cl (2.5 s) is similar to the half-time of the slow phase of proton release, suggesting a correlation between the kinetics of cytochrome f reduction and plastoquinol oxidation.  相似文献   

5.
P.Leslie Dutton  John S. Leigh 《BBA》1973,314(2):178-190
The combination of redox potentiometry with low temperature electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy has led to further characterization of electron transfer components of Chromatium D. These include the readily buffer-soluble cytochromes c553 and c′ and the high-potential iron-sulfur protein in the isolated state and associated with the chromatophore membrane. Buffer-insoluble cytochrome c553, cytochro—me c555, bacteriochlorophyll and the primary electron acceptor have been characterized both in the chromatophore membrane and also in a sodium dodecylsulfate detergent-solubilized subchromatophore preparation. Two iron-sulfur proteins have been revealed which are present in the chromatophore membrane but are released on treatment with sodium dodecylsulfate. They have central g values at 1.90 and 1.94 and have estimated midpoint potentials at pH 7.4 (Em7·4) at +280 mV and ?100 mV, respectively, when associated with the chromatophore.In the membrane associated state the apparent Em of cytochrome c′ is approximately 200 mV more positive than the Em values reported for the free state; this implies either that the reduced form of cytochrome c′ binds to the membrane (or to a component therein) to a degree which is > 103 times greater than that of the oxidized form or that the Em shift results from membrane solvation. In the case of the high-potential iron-sulfur protein however, its Em when associated with the chromatophore membrane is similar to that reported in the isolated state. The light-induced oxidation of the high-potential iron-sulfur protein at room temperature appears to be linked only to the oxidation of cytochrome c555; it could serve as an electron pool in equilibrium with cytochrome c555 in the cyclic electron flow system.The redox component defined in the reduced state by its gy = 1.82 and gx = 1.62 ESR spectrum satisfies the following criteria for its identification as the primary electron acceptor of P883. (a) The Em7·4 value of the g = 1.82 component is ?120 ± 25mV. (b) At ?70 mV, where the g = 1.82 component is mainly oxidized in the dark, brief illumination at low temperature which causes the irreversible oxidation of one cytochrome c553 heme, also induces the permanent reduction of the g = 1.82 component; the extent of reduction after brief illumination, given by the g = 1.82 signal height, is the same as that induced chemically at ?270 mV showing it to be fully reduced by the receipt of a single electron. (c) At more positive potentials where cytochrome c553 is oxidized and is not involved in low-temperature reactions, the light-induced low-temperature kinetics of the g = 1.82 signal are reversible; the flash-induced g = 1.82 formation and subsequent dark decay are the same as those for the flash-induced P+883 (g = 2) formation and dark decay. We suggest that until a full physical-chemical characterization is completed this g = 1.82 component be designated “photoredoxin”.  相似文献   

6.
P. Horton  W. A. Cramer 《BBA》1974,368(3):348-360
(1) (a) A concentration range of ferricyanide ( 0.125–0.5 mM) can be found which in the dark causes oxidation of cytochrome ƒ with two distinct kinetic components of comparable amplitude. The slow oxidation has a half time of 1–2 min. (b) The oxidation of cytochrome ƒ by ferricyanide is rapid and monophasic after the chloroplasts are frozen and thawed. (c) The oxidation of cytochrome b-559 by ferricyanide in the dark is mostly monophasic with a time course similar to that of the fast component in the cytochrome ƒ oxidation. (d) Ascorbate reduction of cytochromes ƒ and b-559 appears monophasic. Reduction of cytochrome b-559 by ascorbate is somewhat faster, and that by hydroquinone somewhat slower, than the corresponding reduction of cytochrome ƒ.

(2) (a) The kinetics of dark ferricyanide oxidation of cytochrome ƒ after actinic preillumination in the presence of an electron acceptor are approximately monophasic with a half time of about 30 s and do not show the presence of the slowly oxidized component observed after prolonged dark incubation. (b) The effect of actinic preillumination in altering the time course of ferricyanide oxidation appears to persist for several minutes in the dark. (c) Preillumination causes an increase in the extent of cytochrome b-559 oxidation by low concentrations of ferricyanide. The increase is inhibited if 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea is present during the preillumination. (d) The presence of 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea during preillumination does not inhibit the amplitude or rate of ferricyanide oxidation of cytochrome ƒ, although the presence of the inhibitor KCN does cause such inhibition.

(3) It is proposed that a significant fraction of the cytochrome ƒ population resides at a position in the membrane relatively inaccessible to the aqueous interface compared to high potential cytochrome b-559. Actinic illumination would cause a structural or conformational change in the cytochrome ƒ and/or the membrane resulting in an increase in accessibility to this fraction of the cytochrome ƒ population.  相似文献   


7.
The flash-induced P515 absorbance change in intact chloroplasts consists of a fast and a slow phase. There is disagreement in the literature over the origin of the slow phase. Here we argue that the flash-induced slow phase in P515 absorbance change is composed of two different components. One component is most probably due to the electrogenic Q-cycle associated with the cytochrome b/f complex. The second component has decay kinetics that are much slower than the electrogenic reactions. We suggest that the second component is due to a non-electrogenic reaction.Abbreviations CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCCD dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - DQH2 durohydroquinone - MV methylviologen - P515 Absorbance change at 518 nm  相似文献   

8.
The reliability of monitoring the redox reactions of cytochrome b using the different wavelengths employed by different authors has been reexamined. It was found that 562-575 nm is suitable in succinate: cytochrome c reductase but not in mitochondria, in which case 562-540 nm is a better pair. Direct optical measurements of the redox reaction kinetics of the mitochondrial Q pool using a commercial dual-wavelength spectrophotometer are possible when succinate is used as the electron donor. Using the correct wavelength pair, and with malonate to slow down the electron input, the reduction course of cytochrome b was still triphasic but a plateau or a turn replaced the oxidation phase previously reported by several authors. At the same time, the reduction course of the Q pool was also triphasic, and in perfect match with that of cytochrome b. Destruction of the Rieske iron-sulfur cluster by British anti-Lewisite (BAL) + O2 treatment or prereduction of the high-potential components made the reduction of both Q and b monophasic. The plot of log (Q/QH2) against log (b3+/b2+) gave a straight line with an n value of 1.7 for cytochrome b at pH 7.4. This n value rose to 2.0 at pH 6.5 and dropped to 1.4 at pH 8.5. On the other hand, the mid-point potential of cytochrome b relative to that of the Q pool remained essentially unchanged between pH 6.5 and 8.4. BAL treatment had a small effect on the midpoint potential of cytochrome b relative to that of the Q pool and had no effect on the n value. Addition of quinone homologues and analogues extended the plateau phase in the reduction of cytochrome b, but exogenous quinones did not equilibrate rapidly with cytochrome b. It was concluded that the appearance of the plateau between the two reduction phases of Q and b is caused by the rapid delivery of electrons to the high-potential components of the respiratory chain as envisaged in the Q cycle; the unexpected n value for cytochrome b suggests a concerted reduction by QH2 of two species of cytochromes b-562.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
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   

11.
Wolfgang Haehnel 《BBA》1982,682(2):245-257
Signal I, the EPR signal of P-700, induced by long flashes as well as the rate of linear electron transport are investigated at partial inhibition of electron transport in chloroplasts. Inhibition of plastoquinol oxidation by dibromothymoquinone and bathophenanthroline, inhibition of plastocyanin by KCN and HgCl2, and inhibition by 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide are used to study a possible electron exchange between electron-transport chains after plastoquinone. (1) At partial inhibition of plastocyanin the reduction kinetics of P-700+ show a fast component comparable to that in control chloroplasts and a new slow component. The slow component indicates P-700+ which is not accessible to residual active plastocyanin under these conditions. We conclude that P-700 is reduced via complexed plastocyanin. (2) The rate of linear electron transport at continuous illumination decreases immediately when increasing amounts of plastocyanin are inhibited by KCN incubation. This is not consistent with an oxidation of cytochrome f by a mobile pool of plastocyanin with respect to the reaction rates of plastocyanin being more than an order of magnitude faster than the rate-limiting step of linear electron transport. It is evidence for a complex between the cytochrome b6 - f complex and plastocyanin. The number of these complexes with active plastocyanin is concluded to control the rate-limiting plastoquinol oxidation. (3) Partial inhibition of the electron transfer between plastoquinone and cytochrome f by dibromothymoquinone and bathophenanthroline causes decelerated monophasic reduction of total P-700+. The P-700 kinetics indicate an electron transfer from the cytochrome b6 - f complex to more than ten Photosystem I reaction center complexes. This cooperation is concluded to occur by lateral diffusion of both complexes in the membrane. (4) The proposed functional organization of electron transport from plastoquinone to P-700 in situ is supported by further kinetic details and is discussed in terms of the spatial distribution of the electron carriers in the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Electron transfer from the tetraheme cytochrome c to the special pair of bacteriochlorophylls (P) has been studied by flash absorption spectroscopy in reaction centers isolated from seven strains of the photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas viridis, where the residue L162, located between the proximal heme c-559 and P, is Y (wild type), F, W, G, M, T, or L. Measurements were performed between 294 K and 8 K, under redox conditions in which the two high-potential hemes of the cytochrome were chemically reduced. At room temperature, the kinetics of P+ reduction include two phases in all of the strains: a dominant very fast phase (VF), and a minor fast phase (F). The VF phase has the following t(1/2): 90 ns (M), 130 ns (W), 135 ns (F), 189 ns (Y; wild type), 200 ns (G), 390 ns (L), and 430 ns (T). These data show that electron transfer is fast whatever the nature of the amino acid at position L162. The amplitudes of both phases decrease suddenly around 200 K in Y, F, and W. The effect of temperature on the extent of fast phases is different in mutants G, M, L, and T, in which electron transfer from c-559 to P+ takes place at cryogenic temperatures in a substantial fraction of the reaction centers (T, 48%; G, 38%; L, 23%, at 40 K; and M, 28%, at 60 K), producing a stable charge separated state. In these nonaromatic mutants the rate of VF electron transfer from cytochrome to P+ is nearly temperature-independent between 294 K and 8 K, remaining very fast at very low temperatures (123 ns at 60 K for M; 251 ns at 40 K for L; 190 ns at 8 K for G, and 458 ns at 8 K for T). In all cases, a decrease in amplitudes of the fast phases is paralleled by an increase in very slow reduction of P+, presumably by back-reaction with Q(A)-. The significance of these results is discussed in relation to electron transfer theories and to freezing at low temperatures of cytochrome structural reorganization.  相似文献   

13.
The spectroscopic measurements of the slow phase of the electrochromic effect and the redox kinetics of cytochrome b6 and f provide strong evidence that a Q cycle operates in chloroplasts under conditions of non-cyclic electron transport. The effect of HQNO and DBMIB on the extent and kinetics of these light-induced changes places several constraints on the mechanism of quinol oxidation by the cyt. b/f—FeS complex: for each electron removed from the cyt. b/f—FeS complex by P700 an additional charge is transferred across the membrane; the cyclic pathway of electrons involved in quinol oxidation by the cyt. b/f—FeS complex includes at least one of the two b6 cytochromes; the electrogenic step associated with quinol oxidation is subsequent to the reduction of at least one cytochrome b6 quinol oxidation may proceed in a stepwise manner, with the first electron going to cytochrome b6 and the second electron going to the FeS center and cytochrome f.  相似文献   

14.
The photo-dependent absorption changes of cytochrome f in bean chloroplasts and native leaves treated with the polyene antibiotics surgumycin and filipin were studied. Upon incubation of the chloroplasts or leaves with the antibiotics the value of the photo-induced signal of cytochrome f decreased considerably; however, the kinetics of the cytochrome oxidation under the effect of the exciting light and dark reduction remained unchanged. An addition of plastocyanin to the suspension of the antibiotic-treated chloroplasts, which contained no artificial donors and acceptors, only slightly increased the absolute value of the photo-induced signal of cytochrome f. An addition of plastocyanin to the chloroplasts containing the dichlorophenolindophenol-ascorbate-methylviologen system, sharply changed the kinetics of the cytochrome f photoconversions. A simultaneous registration of the photo-induced signal of cytochrome f and the photochemical activity of photosystem I of the antibiotic-treated chloroplasts revealed differences in the degree of inhibition of the photosystem I activity and decrease of the absolute value of the cytochrome f signal. The data obtained are discussed in terms of possible alternative pathways of electron transfer in the part of the electron transporting chain under study.  相似文献   

15.
The cytochrome bc1 complexes are proton-translocating, dimeric membrane ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductases that serve as "hubs" in the vast majority of electron transfer chains. After each ubiquinol molecule is oxidized in the catalytic center P at the positively charged membrane side, the two liberated electrons head out, according to the Mitchell's Q-cycle mechanism, to different acceptors. One is taken by the [2Fe-2S] iron-sulfur Rieske protein to be passed further to cytochrome c1. The other electron goes across the membrane, via the low- and high-potential hemes of cytochrome b, to another ubiquinone-binding site N at the opposite membrane side. It has been assumed that two ubiquinol molecules have to be oxidized by center P to yield first a semiquinone in center N and then to reduce this semiquinone to ubiquinol. This review is focused on the operation of cytochrome bc1 complexes in phototrophic purple bacteria. Their membranes provide a unique system where the generation of membrane voltage by light-driven, energy-converting enzymes can be traced via spectral shifts of native carotenoids and correlated with the electron and proton transfer reactions. An "activated Q-cycle" is proposed as a novel mechanism that is consistent with the available experimental data on the electron/proton coupling. Under physiological conditions, the dimeric cytochrome bc1 complex is suggested to be continually primed by prompt oxidation of membrane ubiquinol via center N yielding a bound semiquinone in this center and a reduced, high-potential heme b in the other monomer of the enzyme. Then the oxidation of each ubiquinol molecule in center P is followed by ubiquinol formation in center N, proton translocation and generation of membrane voltage.  相似文献   

16.
Reduction kinetics of cytochrome f, plastocyanin (PC) and P700 (‘high-potential chain’) in thylakoids from spinach were followed after pre-oxidation by a saturating light pulse. We describe a novel approach to follow PC redox kinetics from deconvolution of 810-860 nm absorption changes. The equilibration between the redox-components was analyzed by plotting the redox state of cytochrome f and PC against that of P700. In thylakoids with (1) diminished electron transport rate (adjusted with a cytochrome bf inhibitor) or (2) de-stacked grana, cytochrome f and PC relaxed close to their thermodynamic equilibriums with P700. In stacked thylakoids with non-inhibited electron transport, the equilibration plots were complex and non-hyperbolic, suggesting that during fast electron flux, the ‘high-potential chain’ does not homogeneously equilibrate throughout the membrane. Apparent equilibrium constants <5 were calculated, which are below the thermodynamic equilibrium known for the ‘high potential chain’. The disequilibrium found in stacked thylakoids with high electron fluxes is explained by restricted long-range PC diffusion. We develop a model assuming that about 30% of Photosystem I mainly located in grana end-membranes and margins rapidly equilibrate with cytochrome f via short-distance transluminal PC diffusion, while long-range lateral PC migration between grana cores and distant stroma lamellae is restricted. Implications for the electron flux control are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The origin of nonmonotonic changes in the redox state of P700, the primary electron donor of PSI, was investigated on predarkened barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves exposed to far-red light. To accomplish this, the relaxation kinetics of absorbance changes at 830 nm, reflecting the dark reduction of P700+, were measured at different stages of the induction curve. The onset of far-red light resulted in rapid oxidation of P700, which was followed by its partial reduction and subsequent slow oxidation of P700 to a steady-state level. This steady-state level was usually attained within 10 s under far-red light. The relative contribution of the slow kinetic component of P700+ reduction decreased in parallel with the transient photoreduction of P700+ and increased upon a subsequent stage of P700 photooxidation. The contribution of the middle component to the dark reduction of P700+ increased monotonically with the length of far-red light irradiation. The relative amplitude of the fast component of P700+ reduction increased sharply during the first 3 s of irradiation and decreased upon longer light exposures. The rates of fast and slow components of dark reduction of P700+ remained constant upon illumination of dark-adapted leaves with far-red light for 1 s and longer periods. Thus, nonmonotonic changes in the redox state of P700 in barley leaves exposed to far-red light reflect variable contributions of few alternative electron transport pathways characterized by different rates of electron donation to PSI. The results show the principle possibility of switching-over between alternative pathways of PSI-related electron transfer within one complex of this photosystem. Such switching may occur irrespective of active operation or inhibition of ferredoxin-dependent electron transport.  相似文献   

18.
The reduction of mammalian cytochrome b5 (b5) by NADPH-cytochrome P450 (P450) reductase is involved in a number of biological reactions. The kinetics of the process have received limited consideration previously, and a combination of pre-steady-state (stopped-flow) and steady-state approaches was used to investigate the mechanism of b5 reduction. In the absence of detergent or lipid, a reductase-b5 complex is formed and rearranges slowly to an active form. Electron transfer to b5 is rapid within this complex (>30 s(-1) at 23 degrees C), as fast as to cytochrome c. With excess b5 present, a burst of reduction is observed, consistent with rapid electron transfer to one or two b5 molecules per reductase, followed by a subsequent rate-limiting event. In detergent vesicles, the reductase and b5 interact rapidly but electron transfer is slower (approximately 3 s(-1) at 23 degrees C). Experiments with dimyristyl lecithin vesicles yielded results intermediate between the non-vesicle and detergent systems. These steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetics provide views of the different natures of the reduction of b5 by the reductase in the absence and presence of vesicles. Without vesicles, the encounter of the reductase and b5 is rapid, followed by a slow reorganization of the initial complex (approximately 0.07 s(-1)), very fast reduction, and dissociation. In vesicles, encounter is rapid and the slow step (approximately 3 s(-1)) is reduction within a complex less favorable for reduction than in the non-vesicle systems.  相似文献   

19.
Toxic Cu (II) effect on cytochrome b 559 under aerobic photoinhibitory conditions was examined in two different photosystem II (PSII) membrane preparations active in oxygen evolution. The preparations differ in the content of cytochrome b 559 redox potential forms. Difference absorption spectra showed that the presence of Cu (II) induced the oxidation of the high-potential form of cytochrome b 559 in the dark. Addition of hydroquinone reduced the total oxidized high-potential form of cytochrome b 559 present in Cu (II)-treated PSII membranes indicating that no conversion to the low-potential form took place. Spectroscopic determinations of cytochrome b 559 during photoinhibitory treatment showed slower kinetics of Cu (II) effect on cytochrome b 559 in comparison with the rapid loss of oxygen evolution activity in the same conditions. This result indicates that cytochrome b 559 is affected after PSII centres are photoinhibited. The high-potential form was more sensitive to toxic Cu (II) action than the low-potential form under illumination at pH 6.0. The content of the high-potential form of cytochrome b 559 was completely lost; however, the low-potential content was unaffected in these conditions. This loss did not involve cytochrome protein degradation. The results are discussed in terms of different binding properties of the heme iron to the protonated or unprotonated histidine ligand in the high-potential and low-potential forms of cytochrome b 559, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
Oxidized cytochrome c(1) in photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome bc(1) reversibly binds cyanide with surprisingly high, micromolar affinity. The binding dramatically lowers the redox midpoint potential of heme c(1) and inhibits steady-state turnover activity of the enzyme. As cytochrome c(1), an auxiliary redox center of the high-potential chain of cytochrome bc(1), does not interact directly with the catalytic quinone/quinol binding sites Q(o) and Q(i), cyanide introduces a novel, Q-site independent locus of inhibition. This is the first report of a reversible inhibitor that manipulates the energetics and electron transfers of the high-potential redox chain of cytochrome bc(1), while maintaining quinone substrate catalytic sites in an intact form.  相似文献   

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