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1.
The primary electron acceptor of Photosystem II has a midpoint oxidation-reduction potential of +95 mV at pH 7.0 in Photosystem II chloroplast fragments prepared by digitonin treatment. The midpoint potential of the acceptor has a pH dependence of -60 mV/pH unit. At concentrations that inhibit oxygen evolution, o-phenanthroline shifts the midpoint potential of the primary acceptor by +70 mV. The shifted potential retains the same dependence on pH. The effect of o-phenanthroline suggests that it interacts directly with the primary electron acceptor of photosystem II in a manner similar to that reported previously for the primary electron acceptor in purple photosynthetic bacteria.  相似文献   

2.
Oxidation-reduction thermodynamic equilibria involving the quinone-acceptor complex have been examined in whole-membrane fragments from Chloroflexus aurantiacus. The primary quinone acceptor was titrated by monitoring the amount of cytochrome c554 photooxidized by a flash of light as a function of the redox potential. In contrast to previous data obtained in purified plasma membranes, in which the primary quinone acceptor exhibited a midpoint potential equal to -50 mV at pH 8.2, in whole-membrane fragments it titrated at -210 mV (pH 8.0), with a pH dependence of -60 mV/pH up to a pK value of 9.3. o-Phenanthroline, an inhibitor of electron transfer from the primary to the secondary quinone acceptor, shifted the Em/pH curve of the primary acceptor to higher redox potentials. The midpoint potential of the secondary quinone acceptor and its dependence on pH has been determined by comparing the kinetics of the charge recombination processes within the reaction center complex in the presence and in the absence of o-phenanthroline. It is concluded that both the primary and the secondary quinone acceptors interact with a proton, with pK values of 9.3 and of approximately 10.2 respectively. At physiological pH the electron appears to be stabilized on the secondary with respect to the primary quinone acceptor by approximately 60 meV.  相似文献   

3.
The fluorescence yield of chloroplasts reflects the redox state of the electron acceptor of the Photosystem II reaction center, with increasing yield as the acceptor is reduced. Chemical reductive titrations of fluorescence yield in chloroplasts at room temperature indicate two distinct midpoint potentials, suggesting the possibility of Photosystem II electron acceptor heterogeneity. We have carried out a potentiometric titration of the fluorescence decay kinetics in spinach chloroplasts using a continuous mode-locked dye laser with low-intensity excitation pulses and a picosecond-resolution single-photon timing system. At all potentials the fluorescence decay is best described by three exponential components. As the potential is lowered, the slow phase changes 30-fold in yield with two distinct midpoint potentials, accompanied by a modest (3-fold) increase in the lifetime. The titration curve for the slow component of the fluorescence decay of spinach chloroplasts is best characterized by two single-electron redox reactions with midpoint potentials at pH 8.0 of +119 and ?350 mV, with corresponding relative contributions to the fluorescence yield of 49 and 51%, respectively. There is little change in the fast and middle components of the fluorescence decay. We found that the oxidized form of the redox mediator 2-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone preferentially quenches the fluorescence, causing an anomalous decrease in the apparent midpoint of the high-potential transition. This effect accounts for a significant difference between the midpoint potentials that we observe and some of those previously reported. The selective effect of reduction potentials on particular fluorescence decay components provides useful information about the organization and distribution of the Photosystem II electron acceptor.  相似文献   

4.
John H. Golbeck  Bessel Kok 《BBA》1979,547(2):347-360
The primary photochemical quencher Q and the secondary electron acceptor pool in Photosystem II have been titrated. We used particles of Scenedesmus mutant No. 8 that lack System I and allowed the system to equilibrate with external redox mediators in darkness prior to measurement of the fluorescence rise curve.The titration of Q, as indicated by the dark level of Fi, occurs in two discrete steps. The high-potential component (Qh) has a midpoint potential of +68 mV (pH 7.2) and accounts for ~67% of Q. The pH sensitivity of the midpoint potential is ?60 mV, indicating the involvement of 1 H+e. The low-potential component (Q1) accounts for the remaining 33% of Q and shows a midpoint potential near?300 mV (pH 7.2).The plastoquinone pool, assayed as the half-time of the fluorescence rise curve, titrates as a single component with a midpoint potential 30–40 mV more oxidizing than that of Qh, i.e., at 106 mV (pH 7.2). The Em shows a pH sensitivity of ?60 mV/pH unit, indicating the involvement of 1 H+e. The observation that all 12–14 electron equivalents in the pool titrate as a single component indicates that the heterogeneity otherwise observed in the secondary acceptor system is a kinetic rather than a thermodynamic property.Illumination causes peculiar, and as yet unclarified, changes of both Q and the secondary pool under anaerobic conditions that are reversed by oxygen.  相似文献   

5.
The midpoint potentials of the primary electron acceptors in chromatophores from Rhodopseudomonas spheroides and Chromatium have been studied by titrating the laser-induced P605 and cytochrome c oxidations, respectively. Both midpoint potentials are pH dependent (60 mV/pH unit).o-Phenanthroline shifts the midpoint potentials of the primary acceptors, by +40 mV in Rps spheroides and +135 mV in Chromatium. A similar though less extensive change in midpoint potential was observed in the presence of batho-phenanthroline, but not with 8-hydroxyquinoline. The shifted midpoints retain the same dependence on pH.Some of the effects of o-phenanthroline can be explained by assuming that it chelates the reduced form of the primary electron acceptor. This suggests the presence in the primary electron acceptor of a metal chelated by o- and batho-phenanthroline.In Rps spheroides chromatophores o-phenanthroline inhibits the laser- and flash-induced carotenoid shift at all redox potentials, stimulates the laser-induced P605 oxidation at redox potentials between +350 and +420 mV and slows the decay of the laser-induced cytochrome c oxidation below +180 mV. These effects show that o-phenanthroline may have more than one site of action.  相似文献   

6.
Alan J. Bearden  Richard Malkin 《BBA》1973,325(2):266-274
The light-induced free-radical signal of Photosystem II (observed after illumination at 77 °K) has been studied in chloroplasts as a function of the oxidation-reduction potential established prior to freezing. The intensity of the light-induced signal is unchanged in the potential region of +590 mV to +760 mV. At higher potential (+850 mV), there is a 30% decrease in signal intensity. The light-induced signal decreases to zero in the low-potential region, with a midpoint potential of +475 mV. These results are considered in terms of a Photosystem II reaction-center complex in which the light-induced free-radical signal arises from the oxidized form of the reaction-center chlorophyll, and this chlorophyll molecule is capable of being reduced at liquid-nitrogen temperature by a secondary electron donor which has a midpoint oxidation-reduction potential of +475 mV.  相似文献   

7.
The midpoint potential of the primary electron acceptor of Photosystem I in spinach chloroplasts was titrated using the photooxidation of P700 at −196 °C as an index of the amount of primary acceptor present in the oxidized state. The redox potential of the chloroplast suspension was established by the reducing power of hydrogen gas (mediated by clostridial hydrogenase and 1,1′-trimethylene-2,2′-dipyridylium dibromide) at specific pH values at 25 °C. Samples were frozen to −196 °C and the extent of the photooxidation of P700 was determined from light-minus-dark difference spectra. This titration indicated a midpoint potential of −0.53 V for the primary electron acceptor of Photosystem I.  相似文献   

8.
Oxidation-reduction potentiometry was carried out on Rhodopseudomonas viridis chromatophores. Measurements of e.p.r. signals of the semiquinone-iron type at g=1.82 have revealed a more complex situation than previously reported. The presence of three different components is indicated. The midpoint potential (E(m)) of the primary acceptor quinone/semiquinone couple was found to be approx. -165mV at pH10, with a pK being reached at around pH7.5. The primary acceptor also accepts a second electron with an E(m) of -525mV, but this redox transition exhibits a hysteresis effect. Interaction effects indicate the presence of another component with E(m) values at pH10 of approx. -165mV (pK reached at around pH7.5) for single reduction and -350mV (pK at pH10 or greater) for double reduction. It is suggested that this component is the secondary acceptor. Another semiquinone-iron-type component which gives a g=1.82 signal is also present. This component is distinguishable from the primary acceptor by its e.p.r. spectrum, which shows a double peak at g=1.82 and a g(x) line at g=1.76. This component has E(m) values at pH10 for single and double reduction of -15mV and approx. -150mV respectively. Both of these E(m) values are pH-dependent. The presence of an interaction between this component and the photoreduced primary acceptor indicates the close proximity of these components. However, the midpoint potential of this component indicates a function as a secondary electron-transport component rather than an electron acceptor in the reaction centre. The dependence of the bacteriopheophytin intermediate (I) doublet e.p.r. signal on the presence of the semiquinone-iron form of the primary acceptor is demonstrated. The midpoint potential of the I/I(-) couple is estimated to be lower than -600mV.  相似文献   

9.
We have examined the bacteriochlorophyll reaction-center complex of Chlorobium limicola f. thiosulfatophilum, strain Tassajara. Our results indicate that the midpoint potential of the primary electron donor bacteriochlorophyll of the reaction center is +250 mV at pH 6.8, while that of cytochrome c-553 is +165 mV. There are two cytochrome c-553 hemes per reaction center, and the light-induced oxidation of each is biphasic (t1/2 of less than 5 mus and approximately 50 mus). We belive that this indicates a two state equilibrium with each cytochrome heme being either close to, or a little removed from, the reaction-center bacteriochlorophyll. We have also titrated the primary electron acceptor of the reaction center. Its equilibrium midpoint potential at pH 6.8 is below -450 mV. This is very much lower than the previous estimate for green bacteria, and also substantially lower than values obtained for purple bacteria. Such a low-potential primary acceptor would be thermodynamically capable of direct reduction of NAD+ via ferredoxin in a manner analagous to photosystem I in chloroplasts and blue-green algae.  相似文献   

10.
Bruce A. Diner  René Delosme 《BBA》1983,722(3):452-459
Redox titrations of the flash-induced formation of C550 (a linear indicator of Q?) were performed between pH 5.9 and 8.3 in Chlamydomonas Photosystem II particles lacking the secondary electron acceptor, B. One-third of the reaction centers show a pH-dependent midpoint potential (Em,7.5) = ? 30 mV) for redox couple QQ?, which varies by ?60 mV/pH unit. Two-thirds of the centers show a pH-independent midpoint potential (Emm = + 10 mV) for this couple. The elevated pH-independent Em suggests that in the latter centers the environment of Q has been modified such as to stabilize the semiquinone anion, Q?. The midpoint potentials of the centers having a pH-dependent Em are within 20 mV of those observed in chloroplasts having a secondary electron acceptor. It appears therefore that the secondary electron acceptor exerts little influence on the Em of QQ?. An EPR signal at g 1.82 has recently been attributed to a semiquinone-iron complex which comprises Q?. The similar redox behavior reported here for C550 and reported by others (Evans, M.C.W., Nugent, J.H.A., Tilling, L.A. and Atkinson, Y.E. (1982) FEBS Lett. 145, 176–178) for the g 1.82 signal in similar Photosystem II particles confirm the assignment of this EPR signal to Q?. At below ?200 mV, illumination of the Photosystem II particles produces an accumulation of reduced pheophytin (Ph?). At ?420 mV Ph? appears with a quantum yield of 0.006–0.01 which in this material implies a lifetime of 30–100 ns for the radical pair P-680+Ph?.  相似文献   

11.
Bruce A. Diner  René Delosme 《BBA》1983,722(3):443-451
Redox titration of the electrochromic carotenoid band shift, detected at 50 μs after a saturating actinic flash, in spinach chloroplasts, shows that only one electron acceptor in Photosystem II participates in a transmembrane primary electron transfer. This species, the primary quinone acceptor, Q, shows only one midpoint potential (Em,7.5) of approx. 0 V and is undoubtedly equivalent to the fluorescence quencher, QH. A second titration wave is observed at low potential (Em,7.5 ? ? 240 mV) and at greater than 3 ms after a saturating actinic flash. This wave has an action spectrum different from that of Photosystem II centers containing Q and could arise from a secondary but not primary electron transfer. A low-potential fluorescence quencher is observed in chloroplasts which largely disappears in a single saturating flash at ? 185 mV and which does not participate in a transmembrane electron transfer. This low-potential quencher (probably equivalent to fluorescence quencher, QL) and Q are altogether different species. Redox titration of C550 shows that if electron acceptor Qβ is indeed characterized by an Em,7 of + 120 mV, then this acceptor does not give rise to a C550 signal upon reduction and does not participate in a transmembrane electron transfer. This titration also shows that C550 is not associated with QL.  相似文献   

12.
Michael C. W. Evans 《BBA》1987,894(3):524-533
The oxidation-reduction potential of the iron-quinone electron acceptors in the reaction centre of Rhodopseudomonas viridis has been reinvestigated. In chromatophores treated with o-phenanthroline to remove the secondary acceptor Qb, two steps were observed in the reduction of the primary electron acceptor Qa with Em ≈ − 100 and ≈ − 330 mV. In isolated reaction centres only one step was observed in the reduction of Qa with E ≈ −150 mV. Reconstitution of the reaction centres with additional menaquinone resulted in an increase in the Qa EPR signal and reconstitution of the low-potential step in the oxidation-reduction titration. Reconstitution with ubiquinone resulted in the recovery of the secondary quinone Qb. The addition of ubiquinone did not reconstitute the low-potential step of Qa reduction, or affect the reconstitution of this step by menaquinone. It is concluded that menaquinone can bind to two sites on the reaction centre. Both have properties of the Qa site but with different pK values. It is unlikely that either is the same as the Qb site.  相似文献   

13.
David B. Knaff  Richard Malkin 《BBA》1974,347(3):395-403
The primary reaction of Photosystem II has been studied over the temperature range from −196 to −20 °C. The photooxidation of the reaction-center chlorophyll (P680) was followed by the free-radical electron paramagnetic resonance signal of P680+, and the photoreduction of the Photosystem II primary electron acceptor was monitored by the C-550 absorbance change.

At temperatures below −100 °C, the primary reaction of Photosystem II is irreversible. However, at temperatures between −100 and −20 °C a back reaction that is insensitive to 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1′-dimethylurea (DCMU) occurs between P680+ and the reduced acceptor.

The amount of reduced acceptor and P680+ present under steady-state illumination at temperatures between −100 and −20 °C is small unless high light intensity is used to overcome the competing back reaction. The amount of reduced acceptor present at low light intensity can be increased by adjusting the oxidation-reduction potential so that P680+ is reduced by a secondary electron donor (cytochrome b559) before P680+ can reoxidize the reduced primary acceptor. The photooxidation of cytochrome b559 and the accompanying photoreduction of C-550 are inhibited by DCMU. The inhibition of C-550 photoreduction by DCMU, the dependence of P680 photooxidation and C-550 photoreduction on light intensity, and the effect of the availability of reduced cytochrome b559 on C-550 photoreduction are unique to the temperature range where the Photosystem II primary reaction is reversible and are not observed at lower temperatures.  相似文献   


14.
S. Okayama  W. L. Butler 《BBA》1972,267(3):523-529
The maximum light-induced fluorescence yield, FM, of spinach chloroplasts at − 196 °C was less when the chloroplasts were oxidized with ferricyanide prior to freezing; the minimum fluorescence yield, F0, of the dark-adapted chloroplasts at − 196 °C was unaffected. The ratio of the fluorescence yields, FM/F0, measured at 695 nm at low temperature was 4.5–5.0 for normal chloroplasts and 2.0–2.5 in the presence of ferricyanide. The oxidative titration curve of FM followed a 1 electron Nernst equation with a midpoint potential of 365 mV and followed closely to the oxidation of cytochrome b559. The photoreduction of C−550 at low temperature was the same at all redox potentials over the range of 200–500 mV. It is suggested that a relatively strong oxidant associated with the water-splitting side of Photosystem II, possibly the primary electron donor, can chlorophyll fluorescence of Photosystem II as well as the primary electron acceptor.  相似文献   

15.
Kálmán L  Williams JC  Allen JP 《Biochemistry》2011,50(16):3310-3320
The energetics of a Mn cofactor bound to modified reaction centers were determined, including the oxidation/reduction midpoint potential and free energy differences for electron transfer. To determine these properties, a series of mutants of Rhodobacter sphaeroides were designed that have a metal-ion binding site that binds Mn2+ with a dissociation constant of 1 μM at pH 9.0 (Thielges et al. (2005) Biochemistry 44, 7389-7394). In addition to the Mn binding site, each mutant had changes near the bacteriochlorophyll dimer, P, that resulted in altered P/P+ oxidation/reduction midpoint potentials, which ranged from 480 mV to above 800 mV compared to 505 mV for wild type. The bound Mn2+ is redox active and after light excitation can rapidly reduce the oxidized primary electron donor, P+. The extent of P+ reduction was found to systematically range from a full reduction in the mutants with high P/P+ midpoint potentials to no reduction in the mutant with a potential comparable to wild type. This dependence of the extent of Mn2+ oxidation on the P/P+ midpoint potential can be understood using an equilibrium model and the Nernst equation, yielding a Mn2+/Mn3+ oxidation/reduction midpoint potential of 625 mV at pH 9. In the presence of bicarbonate, the Mn2+/Mn3+ potential was found to be 90 mV lower with a value of 535 mV suggesting that the bicarbonate serves as a ligand to the bound Mn. Measurement of the electron transfer rates yielded rate constants for Mn2+ oxidation ranging from 30 to 120 s(-1) as the P/P+ midpoint potentials increased from 670 mV to approximately 805 mV in the absence of bicarbonate. In the presence of bicarbonate, the rates increased for each mutant with values ranging from 65 to 165 s(-1), reflecting an increase in the free energy difference due to the lower Mn2+/Mn3+ midpoint potential. This dependence of the rate constant on the P/P+ midpoint potential can be understood using a Marcus relationship that yielded limits of at least 150 s(-1) and 290 meV for the maximal rate constant and reorganization energy, respectively. The implications of these results are discussed in terms of the energetics of proteins with redox active Mn cofactors, in particular, the Mn4Ca cofactor of photosystem II.  相似文献   

16.
Flash-induced absorption changes at 820 nm were studied as a function of redox potential in Tris-extracted Photosystem II oxygen-evolving particles and Triton subchloroplast fraction II particles. The rereduction kinetics of P-680+ in both preparations showed biphasic recovery phases with half-times of 42 and 625 microseconds at pH 4.5. The magnitude of the 42 microseconds phase of P-680+ rereduction was strongly dependent on the redox potential of the medium. This absorption transient, attributed to electron donation from D1 (the secondary electron donor in oxygen-inhibited chloroplasts), titrated as a single redox component with a midpoint potential of +240 +/- 35 mV. The experimentally determined midpoint potential was found to be independent of pH over the tested range 4.5-6.0. In contrast, the magnitude of the 625 microseconds phase of P-680+ rereduction was independent of redox potential between +350 and +100 mV. These results are interpreted in terms of a model in which an alternate electron donor with Em approximately equal to 240 mV, termed D0, serves as a rapid donor (t 1/2 less than or equal to 2 microseconds) to P-680+ in Tris-extracted and Triton-treated Photosystem-II preparations. According to this model, the slower electron donor, D1, is functional only when D0 becomes oxidized.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanism of primary photochemistry has been investigated in purified cytoplasmic membranes and isolated reaction centers of Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Redox titrations on the cytoplasmic membranes indicate that the midpoint redox potential of P870, the primary electron donor bacteriochlorophyll, is +362 mV. An early electron acceptor, presumably menaquinone has Em 8.1 = -50 mV, and a tightly bound photooxidizable cytochrome c554 has Em 8.1 = +245 mV. The isolated reaction center has a bacteriochlorophyll to bacteriopheophytin ratio of 0.94:1. A two-quinone acceptor system is present, and is inhibited by o-phenanthroline. Picosecond transient absorption and kinetic measurements indicate the bacteriopheophytin and bacteriochlorophyll form an earlier electron acceptor complex.  相似文献   

18.
The calcium-dependent oxygen evolution activity of preparations of Phormidium luridum shows a marked selectivity in favor of ferricyanide over benzoquinone as Hill oxidant. In addition, the rate of oxygen evolution increases with increasing solution redox potential over the range +350 to +550 mV vs. the standard hydrogen electrode. These properties pertain to both 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-sensitive and -insensitive fractions of the total oxygen evolution activity. Neither changes in solution potential nor use of oxidants other than ferricyanide obviate the need for added Ca2+.

To explain these observations, two models are proposed, each of which invokes the existence of a redox component located within Photosystem II and having a midpoint potential greater than +450 mV. In one model, the postulated species is a donor which competes with water for oxidizing equivalents generated by System II. In the other model, the 450 mV species is a high-potential primary acceptor of System II electrons.  相似文献   


19.
David B. Knaff  Daniel I. Arnon 《BBA》1971,226(2):400-408
Light-induced absorbance changes of cytochrome b559 and C550 in chloroplasts indicate that noncyclic electron transport from water to ferredoxin (Fd)-NADP+ is carried out solely by System II and includes not one but two photoreactions (IIa and IIb) that proceed effectively only in short-wavelength light. (C550 is a new chloroplast component identified by spectral evidence and distinct from cytochromes.) The evidence suggests that the two short-wavelength light reactions operate in series, being joined by a System II chain of electron carriers that includes (but is not limited to) C550, cytochrome b559, and plastocyanin (PC).

H2O → IIbhv → C550 → cyt. b559 → PC → IIahv → Fd → NADP+

Photoreaction IIb involves an electron transfer from water to C550 that does not require plastocyanin and is the first known System II photoreaction resistant to inhibition by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea (DCMU) and o-phenanthroline. Cytochrome b559 is reduced by C550 in a reaction that is readily inhibited by DCMU or o-phenanthroline. Thus, the site of DCMU (and o-phenanthroline) inhibition of System II appears to lie between C550 and cytochrome b559. Photoreaction IIa involves an electron transfer from cytochrome b559 and plastocyanin to ferredoxin-NADP+.  相似文献   


20.
The calcium-dependent oxygen evolution activity of preparations of Phormidium luridum shows a marked selectivity in favor of ferricyanide over benzoquinone as Hill oxidant. In addition, the rate of oxygen evolution increases with increasing solution redox potential over the range +350 to +550 mV vs. the standard hydrogen electrode. These properties pertain to both 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-sensitive and -insensitive fractions of the total oxygen evolution activity. Neither changes in solution potential nor use of oxidants other than ferricyanide obviate the need for added Ca(2+). To explain these observations, two models are proposed, each of which invokes the existence of a redox component located within Photosystem II and having a midpoint potential greater than +450 mV. In one model, the postulated species is a donor which competes with water for oxidizing equivalents generated by System II. In the other model, the 450 mV species is a high-potential primary acceptor of System II electrons.  相似文献   

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