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1.
Chelating behavior of two biologically active ligands, pyridine-2-carboxaldehyde thiosemicarbazone (PT) and pyridine-2-carboxaldehyde-(4-phenyl)thiosemicarbazone (PPT), toward oxovanadium(IV) ion has been studied. The ligands are found to react in the thioketo form (pH 2-4), yielding the complexes [VO(PT)X2](X = Cl-, Br-, ClO4-), [VO(PT)(SO4)H2O], [VO(PPT)2X]X (X = Cl-, Br-, ClO4-) and [VO(PPT)2SO4]. Reactions of [VO(PT)(SO4)H2O] and [VO(PPT)2X]X (X = Cl-, Br-, ClO4-) with a monodenate Lewis base (B) like pyridine lead to the formation of [VO(PT)(SO4)Py]H2O and [VO(PPT)2py]X2 respectively. Bonding sites of the donor molecules around the oxometal cation have been located. Nature of the EPR spectra and magnetic moment values point to the monomeric character of the complexes and suggest a distorted octahedral donor environment for the oxovanadium(IV) ion. Status of the metal-oxygen multiple bond in all the complexes has been computed in terms of the V-O(1) stretching force constant. The ligands themselves and most of their oxovanadium(IV) complexes are found to exert powerful in vitro antibacterial activities towards E. coli.  相似文献   

2.
Nabedryk E  Breton J  Joshi HM  Hanson DK 《Biochemistry》2000,39(47):14654-14663
The photoreduction of the secondary quinone Q(B) in native reaction centers (RCs) of Rhodobacter capsulatus and in RCs from the GluL212 --> Gln and GluL212 --> Ala mutants has been investigated at pH 7 in (1)H(2)O and (2)H(2)O by light-induced Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy. The Q(B)(-)/Q(B) FTIR difference spectra reflect changes of quinone-protein interactions and of protonation state of carboxylic acid groups as well as reorganization of the protein upon electron transfer. Comparison of Q(B)(-)/Q(B) spectra of native and mutant RCs indicates that the interactions between Q(B) or Q(B)(-) and the protein are similar in all RCs. A differential signal at approximately 1650/1640 cm(-1), which is common to all the spectra, is associated with a movement of a peptide carbonyl or a side chain following Q(B) reduction. On the other hand, Q(B)(-)/Q(B) spectra of native and mutant RCs display several differences, notably between 1700 and 1650 cm(-1) (amide I and side chains), between 1570 and 1530 cm(-1) (amide II), and at 1728-1730 cm(-1) (protonated carboxylic acid groups). In particular, the latter region in native RCs is characterized by a main positive band at 1728 cm(-1) and a negative signal at 1739 cm(-1). In the L212 mutants, the amplitude of the positive band is strongly decreased leading to a differential signal at 1739/1730 cm(-1) that is insensitive to (1)H/(2)H isotopic exchange. In native RCs, only the 1728 cm(-1) band is affected in (2)H(2)O while the 1739 cm(-1) signal is not. The effects of the mutations and of (1)H/(2)H exchange on the Q(B)(-)/Q(B) spectra concur in the attribution of the 1728 cm(-1) band in native RCs to (partial) proton uptake by GluL212 upon the first electron transfer to Q(B), as previously observed in Rhodobacter sphaeroides RCs [Nabedryk, E., Breton, J., Hienerwadel, R., Fogel, C., M?ntele, W., Paddock, M. L., and Okamura, M. Y. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 14722-14732]. More generally, strong homologies of the Q(B) to Q(B)(-) transition in the RCs from Rb. sphaeroides and Rb. capsulatus are detected by differential FTIR spectroscopy. The FTIR data are discussed in relation with the results from global proton uptake measurements and electrogenic events concomitant with the reduction of Q(B) and with a model of the Q(B) turnover in Rb. sphaeroides RCs [Mulkidjanian, A. Y. (1999) FEBS Lett. 463, 199-204].  相似文献   

3.
The SLC4A1/AE1 gene encodes the electroneutral Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger of erythrocytes and renal type A intercalated cells. AE1 mutations cause familial spherocytic and stomatocytic anemias, ovalocytosis, and distal renal tubular acidosis. The mutant mouse Ae1 polypeptide E699Q expressed in Xenopus oocytes cannot mediate Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchange or (36)Cl(-) efflux but exhibits enhanced dual sulfate efflux mechanisms: electroneutral exchange of intracellular sulfate for extracellular sulfate (SO(4)(2-)(i)/SO(4)(2-)(o) exchange), and electrogenic exchange of intracellular sulfate for extracellular chloride (SO(4)(2-)(i)/Cl(-)(o) exchange). Whereas wild-type AE1 mediates 1:1 H(+)/SO(4)(2-) cotransport in exchange for either Cl(-) or for the H(+)/SO(4)(2-) ion pair, mutant Ae1 E699Q transports sulfate without cotransport of protons, similar to human erythrocyte AE1 in which the corresponding E681 carboxylate has been chemically converted to the alcohol (hAE1 E681OH). We now show that in contrast to the normal cis-stimulation by protons of wild-type AE1-mediated SO(4)(2-) transport, both SO(4)(2-)(i)/Cl(-)(o) exchange and SO(4)(2-)(i)/SO(4)(2-)(o) exchange mediated by mutant Ae1 E699Q are inhibited by acidic pH(o) and activated by alkaline pH(o). hAE1 E681OH displays a similarly altered pH(o) dependence of SO(4)(2-)(i)/Cl(-)(o) exchange. Elevated [SO(4)(2-)](i) increases the K(1/2) of Ae1 E699Q for both extracellular Cl(-) and SO(4)(2-), while reducing inhibition of both exchange mechanisms by acid pH(o). The E699Q mutation also leads to increased potency of self-inhibition by extracellular SO(4)(2-). Study of the Ae1 E699Q mutation has revealed the existence of a novel pH-regulatory site of the Ae1 polypeptide and should continue to provide valuable paths toward understanding substrate selectivity and self-inhibition in SLC4 anion transporters.  相似文献   

4.
Ono T  Rompel A  Mino H  Chiba N 《Biophysical journal》2001,81(4):1831-1840
Effects of adding monovalent alkali metal cations to Ca(2+)-depleted photosystem (PS)II membranes on the biochemical and spectroscopic properties of the oxygen-evolving complex were studied. The Ca(2+)-dependent oxygen evolution was competitively inhibited by K(+), Rb(+), and Cs(+), the ionic radii of which are larger than the radius of Ca(2+) but not inhibited significantly by Li(+) and Na(+), the ionic radii of which are smaller than that of Ca(2+). Ca(2+)-depleted membranes without metal cation supplementation showed normal S(2) multiline electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal and an S(2)Q(A)(-) thermoluminescence (TL) band with a normal peak temperature after illumination under conditions for single turnover of PSII. Membranes supplemented with Li(+) or Na(+) showed properties similar to those of the Ca(2+)-depleted membranes, except for a small difference in the TL peak temperatures. The peak temperature of the TL band of membranes supplemented with K(+), Rb(+), or Cs(+) was elevated to approximately 38 degrees C which coincided with that of Y(D)(+)Q(A)(-) TL band, and no S(2) EPR signals were detected. The K(+)-induced high-temperature TL band and the S(2)Q(A)(-) TL band were interconvertible by the addition of K(+) or Ca(2+) in the dark. Both the Ca(2+)-depleted and the K(+)-substituted membranes showed the narrow EPR signal corresponding to the S(2)Y(Z)(+) state at g = 2 by illuminating the membranes under multiple turnover conditions. These results indicate that the ionic radii of the cations occupying Ca(2+)-binding site crucially affect the properties of the manganese cluster.  相似文献   

5.
Interactions between hexacyanoiron(II/III) and a dinuclear, mixed valence Cu(A) center in engineered Cu(A) azurin have been investigated by UV-visible (UV-vis) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic techniques. Addition of ferricyanide (hexacyanoiron(III)) to the Cu(A) azurin resulted in a new absorption band around 500 nm in the UV-vis and an isotropic line at g = 2.16 in the EPR spectra. Control experiments, including additions of Cu(II)SO(4) or Cu(I)(CH(3)CN)(4)PF(6) to ferricyanide or ferrocyanide, as well as gel filtration purification of the ferricyanide-Cu(A) azurin adduct indicate complex formation between cupric ion and ferrocyanide ion in the protein. Solvent or small molecule accessibility, metal oxidation state and the presence of more than one metal ion are potential factors important for the complex formation. These findings must be taken into consideration when using ferricyanide or ferrocyanide as redox agents for studying Cu(A) centers in proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Suzuki H  Nagasaka MA  Sugiura M  Noguchi T 《Biochemistry》2005,44(34):11323-11328
Fourier transform infrared difference spectra upon single reduction of the secondary quinone electron acceptor Q(B) in photosystem II (PSII), without a contribution from the electron donor-side signals, were obtained for the first time using Mn-depleted PSII core complexes of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. The Q(B)(-)/Q(B) difference spectrum exhibited a strong C...O stretching band of the semiquinone anion at 1480 cm(-)(1), the frequency higher by 2 cm(-)(1) than that of the corresponding band of Q(A)(-), in agreement with the previous S(2)Q(B)(-)/S(1)Q(B) spectrum of the PSII membranes of spinach [Zhang, H., Fischer, G., and Wydrzynski, T. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 5511-5517]. Also, several peaks originating from the Fermi resonance of coupled His modes with its strongly H-bonded NH vibration were observed in the 2900-2600 cm(-)(1) region, where the peak frequencies were higher by 7-24 cm(-)(1) compared with those of the Q(A)(-)/Q(A) spectrum. These frequency differences suggest that H-bond interactions of the CO groups, especially with a His side chain, are different between Q(B)(-) and Q(A)(-). Furthermore, a prominent positive peak was observed at 1745 cm(-)(1) in the C=O stretching region of COOH or ester groups in the Q(B)(-)/Q(B) spectrum. The peak frequency was unaffected by D(2)O substitution, indicating that this peak does not arise from a COOH group but probably from the 10a-ester C=O group of the pheophytin molecule adjacent to Q(B). The absence of protonation of carboxylic amino acids upon Q(B)(-) formation in contrast to the previous observation in the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides suggests that the protonation mechanism of Q(B) in PSII is different from that of bacterial reaction centers.  相似文献   

7.
High-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (HF EPR) techniques have been employed to look for localized light-induced conformational changes in the protein environments around the reduced secondary quinone acceptor (Q(B)(-)) in Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Blastochloris viridis RCs. The Q(A)(-) and Q(B)(-) radical species in Fe-removed/Zn-replaced protonated RCs substituted with deuterated quinones are distinguishable with pulsed D-band (130 GHz) EPR and provide native probes of both the low-temperature Q(A)(-)Q(B) --> Q(A)Q(B)(-) electron-transfer event and the structure of trapped conformational substates. We report here the first spectroscopic evidence that cryogenically trapped, light-induced changes enable low-temperature Q(A)(-)Q(B) --> Q(A)Q(B)(-) electron transfer in the B. viridis RC and the first observation of an inactive, trapped P(+)Q(B)(-) state in both R. sphaeroides and B. viridis RCs that does not recombine at 20 K. The high resolution and orientational selectivity of HF electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) allows us to directly probe protein environments around Q(B)(-) for distinct P(+)Q(B)(-) kinetic RC states by spectrally selecting specific nuclei in isotopically labeled samples. No structural differences in the protein structure near Q(B)(-) or reorientation (within 5 degrees ) of Q(B)(-) was observed with HF ENDOR spectra of two states of P(+)Q(B)(-): "active" and "inactive" states with regards to low-temperature electron transfer. These results reveal a remarkably enforced local protein environment for Q(B) in its reduced semiquinone state and suggest that the conformational change that controls reactivity resides beyond the Q(B) local environment.  相似文献   

8.
In Rhodobacter sphaeroides reaction centers (RCs) containing the mutation Ala M260 to Trp (AM260W), transmembrane electron transfer along the full-length of the A-branch of cofactors is prevented by the loss of the Q(A) ubiquinone, but it is possible to generate the radical pair P(+)H(A)(-) by A-branch electron transfer or the radical pair P(+)Q(B)(-) by B-branch electron transfer. In the present study, FTIR spectroscopy was used to provide direct evidence for the complete absence of the Q(A) ubiquinone in mutant RCs with the AM260W mutation. Light-induced FTIR difference spectroscopy of isolated RCs was also used to probe the neutral Q(B) and the semiquinone Q(B)(-) states in two B-branch active mutants, a double AM260W-LM214H mutant, denoted WH, and a quadruple mutant, denoted WAAH, in which the AM260W, LM214H, and EL212A-DL213A mutations were combined. The data were compared to those obtained with wild-type (Wt) RCs and the double EL212A-DL213A (denoted AA) mutant which exhibit the usual A-branch electron transfer to Q(B). The Q(B)(-)/Q(B) spectrum of the WH mutant is very close to that of Wt RCs indicating similar bonding interactions of Q(B) and Q(B)(-) with the protein in both RCs. The Q(B)(-)/Q(B) spectra of the AA and WAAH mutants are also closely related to one another, but are very different to that of the Wt complex. Isotope-edited IR fingerprint spectra were obtained for the AA and WAAH mutants reconstituted with site-specific (13)C-labeled ubiquinone. Whilst perturbations of the interactions of the semiquinone Q(B)(-) with the protein are observed in the AA and WAAH mutants, the FTIR data show that the bonding interaction of neutral Q(B) in these two mutants are essentially the same as those for Wt RCs. Therefore, it is concluded that Q(B) occupies the same binding position proximal to the non-heme iron prior to reduction by either A-branch or B-branch electron transfer.  相似文献   

9.
Zhang C  Boussac A  Rutherford AW 《Biochemistry》2004,43(43):13787-13795
The states induced by illumination at 7 K in the oxygen-evolving enzyme (PSII) from Thermosynechococcus elongatus were studied by EPR. In the S(0) and S(1) redox states, two g approximately 2 EPR signals, a split signal and a g = 2.03 signal, respectively, were generated by illumination with visible light. These signals were comparable to those already reported in plant PSII in terms of their g value, shape, and stability at low temperatures. We report that the formation and decay of these signals correlate with EPR signals from the semiquinone of the first quinone electron acceptor, Q(A)(-). The light-induced EPR signals from oxidized side-path electron donors (Cyt b(559), Car, and Chl(Z)) were also measured, and from these and the signals from Q(A)(-), estimates were made of the proportion of centers involved in the formation of the g approximately 2 signals (approximately 50% in S(0) and 40% in S(1)). Comparisons with the signals generated in plant PSII indicated approximately similar yields for the S(0) split signal. A single laser flash at 7 K induced more than 75% of the maximum split and g = 2.03 EPR signal observed by continuous illumination, with no detectable oxidation of side-path donors. The matching electron acceptor side reactions, the high quantum yield, and the relatively large proportion of centers involved support earlier suggestions that the state being monitored is Tyr(Z)(*)Q(A)(-), with the g approximately 2 EPR signals arising from Tyr(Z)(*) interacting magnetically with the Mn complex. The current picture of the photochemical reactions occurring in PSII at low temperatures is reassessed.  相似文献   

10.
All organisms except the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans have been shown to possess an import system for peroxisomal proteins containing a peroxisome targeting signal type 2 (PTS2). The currently accepted consensus sequence for this amino-terminal nonapeptide is -(R/K)(L/V/I)X(5)(H/Q)(L/A)-. Some C.elegans proteins contain putative PTS2 motifs, including the ortholog (CeMeK) of human mevalonate kinase, an enzyme known to be targeted by PTS2 to mammalian peroxisomes. We cloned the gene for CeMeK (open reading frame Y42G9A.4) and examined the subcellular localization of CeMeK and of two other proteins with putative PTS2s at their amino termini encoded by the open reading frames D1053.2 and W10G11.11. All three proteins localized to the cytosol, confirming and extending the finding that C.elegans lacks PTS2-dependent peroxisomal protein import. The putative PTS2s of the proteins encoded by D1053.2 and W10G11.11 did not function in targeting to peroxisomes in yeast or mammalian cells, suggesting that the current PTS2 consensus sequence is too broad. Analysis of available experimental data on both functional and nonfunctional PTS2s led to two re-evaluated PTS2 consensus sequences: -R(L/V/I/Q)XX(L/V/I/H)(L/S/G/A)X(H/Q)(L/A)-, describes the most common variants of PTS2, while -(R/K)(L/V/I/Q)XX(L/V/I/H/Q)(L/S/G/A/K)X(H/Q)(L/A/F)-, describes essentially all variants of PTS2. These redefined PTS2 consensus sequences will facilitate the identification of proteins of unknown cellular localization as possible peroxisomal proteins.  相似文献   

11.
EPR was used to study the influence of formate on the electron acceptor side of photosystem II (PSII) from Thermosynechococcus elongatus. Two new EPR signals were found and characterized. The first is assigned to the semiquinone form of Q(B) interacting magnetically with a high spin, non-heme-iron (Fe2(+), S=2) when the native bicarbonate/carbonate ligand is replaced by formate. This assignment is based on several experimental observations, the most important of which were: (i) its presence in the dark in a significant fraction of centers, and (ii) the period-of-two variations in the concentration expected for Q(B)(?-) when PSII underwent a series of single-electron turnovers. This signal is similar but not identical to the well-know formate-modified EPR signal observed for the Q(A)(?-)Fe2(+) complex (W.F.J. Vermaas and A.W. Rutherford, FEBS Lett. 175 (1984) 243-248). The formate-modified signals from Q(A)(?-)Fe2(+) and Q(B)(?-)Fe2(+) are also similar to native semiquinone-iron signals (Q(A)(?-)Fe2(+)/Q(B)(?-)Fe2(+)) seen in purple bacterial reaction centers where a glutamate provides the carboxylate ligand to the iron. The second new signal was formed when Q(A)(?-) was generated in formate-inhibited PSII when the secondary acceptor was reduced by two electrons. While the signal is reminiscent of the formate-modified semiquinone-iron signals, it is broader and its main turning point has a major sub-peak at higher field. This new signal is attributed to the Q(A)(?-)Fe2(+) with formate bound but which is perturbed when Q(B) is fully reduced, most likely as Q(B)H? (or possibly Q(B)H(?-) or Q(B)(2?-)). Flash experiments on formate-inhibited PSII monitoring these new EPR signals indicate that the outcome of charge separation on the first two flashes is not greatly modified by formate. However on the third flash and subsequent flashes, the modified Q(A)(?-)Fe2(+)Q(B)H? signal is trapped in the EPR experiment and there is a marked decrease in the quantum yield of formation of stable charge pairs. The main effect of formate then appears to be on Q(B)H? exchange and this agrees with earlier studies using different methods.  相似文献   

12.
Low-temperature Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy has been used to study mutants of Glu194 and Glu204, two amino acids that are involved in proton release to the extracellular side of bacteriorhodopsin. Difference spectra of films of E194Q, E204Q, E194Q/E204Q, E9Q/E194Q/E204Q, and E9Q/E74Q/E194Q/E204Q at 243, 277, and 293 K and several pH values were obtained by continuous illumination. A specific effect of Cl(-) ions was found for the mutants, promoting a N-like intermediate at alkaline pH and an O' intermediate at neutral or acid pH. The apparent pK(a) of Asp85 in the M intermediate was found to be decreased for E194Q in the presence of Cl(-) (pK(a) of 7.6), but it was unchanged for E204Q, as compared to wild-type. In the absence of Cl(-) (i.e., in the presence of SO(4)(2)(-)), mutation of Glu194 or of Glu204 produces M- (or M(N), M(G))-like intermediates under all of the conditions examined. The absence of N, O, and O' intermediates suggests a long-range effect of the mutation. Furthermore, it is suggested that Cl(-) acts by reaching the interior of the protein, rather than producing surface effects. The effect of low water content was also examined, in the presence of Cl(-). Similar spectra corresponding to the M(1) intermediate were found for dry samples of both mutants, indicating that the effects of the mutations or of Cl(-) ions are confined to the second part of the photocycle. The water O-H stretching data further confirms altered photocycles and the effect of Cl(-) on the accumulation of the N intermediate.  相似文献   

13.
Selection for nursing ability and adult weight in mice   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Three selection treatments were conducted for 12 generations in each of two base populations (P and Q): (1) increased nursing ability of the mother (n12), as measured by mean 12-day weight of eight young within a crossfostering set (M(P) and M(Q) lines), (2) increased adult (42-day) body weight of the offspring (w42) (W(P) and W( Q) lines), and (3) performance combining the two traits (n12 and w42) into a selection index (B(P) and B(Q) lines). Lines C( P) and C(Q) were maintained as unselected controls in each population. In each line-generation subclass, 92 single-pair matings were made and the offspring assigned to balanced crossfostering sets of four dams each. Regression coefficients of mean performance (in grams) on generations were 0.080 +/-0.029 and 0.054 +/- 0.031 for n12 in M(P) and M(Q), and 0.680 +/- 0.039 and 0.868 +/- 0.051 for w42 in W(P) and W(Q), respectively. The B(P) and B(Q) lines showed genetic gains in n12 (0.090 and 0.053, respectively) and w42 (0.576 and 0.696) intermediate between the performance of M(P) and W(P), and M(Q) and W(Q), respectively, except for n12 of B(Q). Realized heritabilities for n12 were 0.16 +/- 0.05 and 0.11 +/- 0.06 and those for w42 were 0.40 +/- 0.02 and 0.43 +/- 0.03 for P and Q, respectively. The realized genetic correlations between n12 and w42 were 0.70 +/- 0.07 and 0.73 +/- 0.08 in P and Q, respectively. The ratios of the predicted to observed responses in M(P), B(P) and B(Q) were 0.99, 1.03 and 0.89, respectively. However, the predicted and observed responses differed in M( Q), W(P) and W(Q); the ratios were 1.29, 0.65 and 0.65, respectively. The observed combined responses for n12 and w42 in the index lines (B(P) and B(Q)) were smaller than the optimum expected from index selection. A possible cause was that the estimated genetic correlations (0.22 +/- 0.16 and -0.17 +/- 0.16 for B(P) and B( Q), respectively) and heritabilities (0.39 +/- 0.03 and 0.28 +/- 0.02, respectively) for w42 that were used to construct the selection index were smaller than the respective realized parameters.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of metal ions with isolated photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from the purple bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides, Rhodobacter capsulatus, and Rhodopseudomonas viridis has been investigated with transient optical and magnetic resonance techniques. In RCs from all species, the electrochromic response of the bacteriopheophytin cofactors associated with Q(A)(-)Q(B) --> Q(A)Q(B)(-) electron transfer is slowed in the presence of Cu(2+). This slowing is similar to the metal ion effect observed for RCs from Rb. sphaeroides where Zn(2+) was bound to a specific site on the surface of the RC [Utschig et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 8278]. The coordination environments of the Cu(2+) sites were probed with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, providing the first direct spectroscopic evidence for the existence of a second metal site in RCs from Rb. capsulatus and Rps. viridis. In the dark, RCs with Cu(2+) bound to the surface exhibit axially symmetric EPR spectra. Electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectral results indicate multiple weakly hyperfine coupled (14)N nuclei in close proximity to Cu(2+). These ESEEM spectra resemble those observed for Cu(2+) RCs from Rb. sphaeroides [Utschig et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 2961] and indicate that two or more histidines ligate the Cu(2+) at the surface site in each RC. Thus, RCs from Rb. sphaeroides, Rb. capsulatus, and Rps. viridis each have a structurally analogous Cu(2+) binding site that is involved in modulating the Q(A)(-)Q(B) --> Q(A)Q(B)(-) electron-transfer process. Inspection of the Rps. viridis crystal structure reveals four potential histidine ligands from three different subunits (M16, H178, H72, and L211) located beneath the Q(B) binding pocket. The location of these histidines is surprisingly similar to the grouping of four histidine residues (H68, H126, H128, and L211) observed in the Rb. sphaeroides RC crystal structure. Further elucidation of these Cu(2+) sites will provide a means to investigate localized proton entry into the RCs of Rb. capsulatus and Rps. viridis as well as locate a site of protein motions coupled with electron transfer.  相似文献   

15.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron-nuclear double resonance studies of the photosystem (PS) I quinone acceptor, A(1), in phylloquinone biosynthetic pathway mutants are described. Room temperature continuous wave EPR measurements at X-band of whole cells of menA and menB interruption mutants show a transient reduction and oxidation of an organic radical with a g-value and anisotropy characteristic of a quinone. In PS I complexes, the continuous wave EPR spectrum of the photoaccumulated Q(-) radical, measured at Q-band, and the electron spin-polarized transient EPR spectra of the radical pair P700(+) Q(-), measured at X-, Q-, and W-bands, show three prominent features: (i) Q(-) has a larger g-anisotropy than native phylloquinone, (ii) Q(-) does not display the prominent methyl hyperfine couplings attributed to the 2-methyl group of phylloquinone, and (iii) the orientation of Q(-) in the A(1) site as derived from the spin polarization is that of native phylloquinone in the wild type. Electron spin echo modulation experiments on P700(+) Q(-) show that the dipolar coupling in the radical pair is the same as in native PS I, i.e. the distance between P700(+) and Q(-) (25.3 +/- 0.3 A) is the same as between P700(+) and A(1)(-) in the wild type. Pulsed electron-nuclear double resonance studies show two sets of resolved spectral features with nearly axially symmetric hyperfine couplings. They are tentatively assigned to the two methyl groups of the recruited plastoquinone-9, and their difference indicates a strong inequivalence among the two groups when in the A(1) site. These results show that Q (i) functions in accepting an electron from A(0)(-) and in passing the electron forward to the iron-sulfur clusters, (ii) occupies the A(1) site with an orientation similar to that of phylloquinone in the wild type, and (iii) has spectroscopic properties consistent with its identity as plastoquinone-9.  相似文献   

16.
Analytically pure samples of the Romanowsky dyes eosin y, erythrosin b and tetrachlorofluorescein are prepared. DC of the dye samples shows no contaminations. We measured the absorption spectra of the dye dianions in alkaline aqueous solution and of the dye acids in 95% ethanol at very low dye concentrations. The molar extinction coefficients of the long wavelength absorption of the monomeric dye species are determined (Table 1). The extinction coefficients may be used for standardisation of dye samples. The absorption spectra of eosin y in aqueous solution are dependent on concentration. Using a new very sensitive method it was possible to identify two association equilibria from the concentration dependency of the spectra. Dimers are formed even in very dilute solutions, at higher concentrations tetramers. The dissociation constant of the dimers D in monomers M at 293 K, pH = 12, is K21 = 2,9 X 10(-5) M; of the tetramers Q in dimers D K42 = 2,4 X 10(-3) M. From the experimental spectra of eosin solutions at various concentrations, pH = 12, and the equilibrium constants K21, K42 the absorption spectra of the pure monomers, dimers and tetramers are calculated. M has one long wavelength absorption band, VM = 19300 cm-1, epsilon M = 1,03 X 10(5) M-1 cm-1; D also one absorption band, VD = 19300 cm-1, epsilon D = 1,74 X 10(5) M-1 cm-1; Q two absorption bands, VQ1 = 19100, VQ2 = 20200 cm-1, epsilon Q1 = 1,65 X 10(5), epsilon Q2 = 1,96 X 10(5) M-1 cm-1. The absorption spectrum of the dimers is discussed by quantum mechanics.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of ten imidazolyl nitrones to directly scavenge free radicals (R(*)) generated in polar ((*)OH, O(*)(2)(-), SO(*)(3)(-) cysteinyl, (*)CH(3)) or in apolar (CH(3)-(*)CH-CH(3)) media has been studied. When oxygen or sulfur-centered radicals are generated in polar media, EPR spectra are not or weakly observed with simple spectral features. Strong line intensities and more complicated spectra are observed with the isopropyl radical generated in an apolar medium. Intermediate results are obtained with (*)CH(3) generated in a polar medium. EPR demonstrates the ability of these nitrones to trap radicals to the nitrone C(alpha) atom (alpha radical adduct) and to the imidazol C(5) atom (5-radical adduct). Beside the nucleophilic addition of the radical to the C(alpha) atom, the EPR studies suggest a two-step mechanism for the overall reaction of R(*) attacking the imidazol core. The two steps seem to occur very fast with the (*)OH radical obtained in a polar medium and slower with the isopropyl radical prepared in benzene. In conclusion, imidazolyl nitrones present a high capacity to trap and stabilize carbon-centered radicals.  相似文献   

18.
Chu HA  Feng YW  Wang CM  Chiang KA  Ke SC 《Biochemistry》2004,43(34):10877-10885
Light-induced Fourier transform infrared difference spectroscopy has been applied to studies of ammonia effects on the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II (PSII). We found that NH(3) induced characteristic spectral changes in the region of the symmetric carboxylate stretching modes (1450-1300 cm(-1)) of the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) FTIR difference spectra of PSII. The S(2) state carboxylate mode at 1365 cm(-1) in the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) spectrum of the controlled samples was very likely upshifted to 1379 cm(-1) in that of NH(3)-treated samples; however, the frequency of the corresponding S(1) carboxylate mode at 1402 cm(-1) in the same spectrum was not significantly affected. These two carboxylate modes have been assigned to a Mn-ligating carboxylate whose coordination mode changes from bridging or chelating to unidentate ligation during the S(1) to S(2) transition [Noguchi, T., Ono, T., and Inoue, Y. (1995) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1228, 189-200; Kimura, Y., and Ono, T.-A. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 14061-14068]. Therefore, our results show that NH(3) induced significant structural changes of the OEC in the S(2) state. In addition, our results also indicated that the NH(3)-induced spectral changes of the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) spectrum of PSII are dependent on the temperature of the FTIR measurement. Among the temperatures we measured, the strongest effect was seen at 250 K, a lesser effect was seen at 225 K, and little or no effect was seen at 200 K. Furthermore, our results also showed that the NH(3) effects on the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) spectrum of PSII are dependent on the concentrations of NH(4)Cl. The NH(3)-induced upshift of the 1365 cm(-1) mode is apparent at 5 mM NH(4)Cl and is completely saturated at 100 mM NH(4)Cl concentration. Finally, we found that CH(3)NH(2) has a small but clear effect on the spectral change of the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) FTIR difference spectrum of PSII. The effects of amines on the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) FTIR difference spectra (NH(3) > CH(3)NH(2) > AEPD and Tris) are inverse proportional to their size (Tris approximately AEPD > CH(3)NH(2) > NH(3)). Therefore, our results showed that the effects of amines on the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) spectrum of PSII are sterically selective for small amines. On the basis of the correlations between the conditions (dependences on the excitation temperature and NH(3) concentration and the steric requirement for the amine effects) that give rise to the NH(3)-induced upshift of the 1365 cm(-)(1) mode in the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) spectrum of PSII and the conditions that give rise to the altered S(2) state multiline EPR signal, we propose that the NH(3)-induced upshift of the 1365 cm(-1) mode is caused by the binding of NH(3) to the site on the Mn cluster that gives rise to the altered S(2) state multiline EPR signal. In addition, we found no significant NH(3)-induced change in the S(2)Q(A)(-)/S(1)Q(A) FTIR difference spectrum at 200 K. Under this condition, the OEC gives rise to the NH(3)-stabilized g = 4.1 EPR signal and a suppressed g = 2 multiline EPR signal. Our results suggest that the structural difference of the OEC between the normal g = 2 multiline form and the NH(3)-stabilized g = 4.1 form is small.  相似文献   

19.
The primary quinone acceptor radical anion Q(A)(-)(*) (a menaquinone-9) is studied in reaction centers (RCs) of Rhodopseudomonas viridis in which the high-spin non-heme Fe(2+) is replaced by diamagnetic Zn(2+). The procedure for the iron substitution, which follows the work of Debus et al. [Debus, R. J., Feher, G., and Okamura, M. Y. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 2276-2287], is described. In Rps. viridisan exchange rate of the iron of approximately 50% +/- 10% is achieved. Time-resolved optical spectroscopy shows that the ZnRCs are fully competent in charge separation and that the charge recombination times are similar to those of native RCs. The g tensor of Q(A)(-)(*) in the ZnRCs is determined by a simulation of the EPR at 34 GHz yielding g(x) = 2.00597 (5), g(y) = 2.00492 (5), and g(z) = 2.00216 (5). Comparison with a menaquinone anion radical (MQ(4)(-)(*)) dissolved in 2-propanol identifies Q(A)(-)(*) as a naphthoquinone and shows that only one tensor component (g(x)) is predominantly changed in the RC. This is attributed to interaction with the protein environment. Electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) experiments at 9 GHz reveal a shift of the spin density distribution of Q(A)(-)(*) in the RC as compared with MQ(4)(-)(*) in alcoholic solution. This is ascribed to an asymmetry of the Q(A) binding site. Furthermore, a hyperfine coupling constant from an exchangeable proton is deduced and assigned to a proton in a hydrogen bond between the quinone oxygen and surrounding amino acid residues. By electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) techniques performed on Q(A)(-)(*) in the ZnRCs, two (14)N nuclear quadrupole tensors are determined that arise from the surrounding amino acids. One nitrogen coupling is assigned to a N(delta)((1))-H of a histidine and the other to a polypeptide backbone N-H by comparison with the nuclear quadrupole couplings of respective model systems. Inspection of the X-ray structure of Rps. viridis RCs shows that His(M217) and Ala(M258) are likely candidates for the respective amino acids. The quinone should therefore be bound by two H bonds to the protein that could, however, be of different strength. An asymmetric H-bond situation has also been found for Q(A)(-)(*) in the RC of Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) experiments are performed on the radical pair state P(960)(+) (*)Q(A)(-)(*) in ZnRCs of Rps. viridis that were treated with o-phenanthroline to block electron transfer to Q(B). The orientations of the two radicals in the radical pair obtained from transient EPR and their distance deduced from pulsed EPR (out-of-phase ESEEM) are very similar to the geometry observed for the ground state P(960)Q(A) in the X-ray structure [Lancaster, R., Michel, H. (1997) Structure 5, 1339].  相似文献   

20.
Previously, we investigated ubisemiquinone (SQ) EPR spectra associated with NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) in the tightly coupled bovine heart submitochondrial particles (SMP). Based upon their widely differing spin relaxation rate, we distinguished SQ spectra arising from three distinct SQ species, namely SQ(Nf) (fast), SQ(Ns) (slow), and SQ(Nx) (very slow). The SQ(Nf) signal was observed only in the presence of the proton electrochemical gradient (deltamu(H)(+)), while SQ(Ns) and SQ(Nx) species did not require the presence of deltamu(H+). We have now succeeded in characterizing the redox and EPR properties of SQ species in the isolated bovine heart complex I. The potentiometric redox titration of the g(z,y,x)=2.00 semiquinone signal gave the redox midpoint potential (E(m)) at pH 7.8 for the first electron transfer step [E(m1)(Q/SQ)] of -45 mV and the second step [E(m2)(SQ/QH(2))] of -63 mV. It can also be expressed as [E(m)(Q/QH(2))] of -54 mV for the overall two electron transfer with a stability constant (K(stab)) of the SQ form as 2.0. These characteristics revealed the existence of a thermodynamically stable intermediate redox state, which allows this protein-associated quinone to function as a converter between n=1 and n=2 electron transfer steps. The EPR spectrum of the SQ species in complex I exhibits a Gaussian-type spectrum with the peak-to-peak line width of approximately 6.1 G at the sample temperature of 173 K. This indicates that the SQ species is in an anionic Q(-) state in the physiological pH range. The spin relaxation rate of the SQ species in isolated complex I is much slower than the SQ counterparts in the complex I in situ in SMP. We tentatively assigned slow relaxing anionic SQ species as SQ(Ns), based on the monophasic power saturation profile and several fold increase of its spin relaxation rate in the presence of reduced cluster N2. The current study also suggests that the very slowly relaxing SQ(Nx) species may not be an intrinsic complex I component. The functional role of SQ(Ns) is further discussed in connection with the SQ(Nf) species defined in SMP in situ.  相似文献   

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