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1.
We have probed the absorption changes due to an externally applied electric field (Stark effect) of Photosystem I (PSI) core complexes from the cyanobacteria Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, Synechococcus elongatus and Spirulina platensis. The results reveal that the so-called C719 chlorophylls in S. elongatus and S. platensis are characterized by very large polarizability differences between the ground and electronically excited states (with Tr(Deltaalpha) values up to about 1000 A(3) f(-2)) and by moderately high change in permanent dipole moments (with average Deltamu values between 2 and 3 D f(-1)). The C740 chlorophylls in S. platensis and, in particular, the C708 chlorophylls in all three species give rise to smaller Stark shifts, which are, however, still significantly larger than those found before for monomeric chlorophyll. The results confirm the hypothesis that these states originate from strongly coupled chlorophyll a molecules. The absorption and Stark spectra of the beta-carotene molecules are almost identical in all complexes and suggest similar or slightly higher values for Tr(Deltaalpha) and Deltamu than for those of beta-carotene in solution. Oxidation of P700 did not significantly change the Stark response of the carotenes and the red antenna states C719 and C740, but revealed in all PSI complexes changes around 700-705 and 690-693 nm, which we attribute to the change in permanent dipole moments of reduced P700 and the chlorophylls responsible for the strong absorption band at 690 nm with oxidized P700, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
We present an electric field modulated absorption spectroscopy (Stark effect) study of isolated photosystem II reaction center complexes, including a preparation in which the inactive pheophytin H(B) was exchanged for 13(1)-deoxo-13(1)-hydroxy-pheophytin. The results reveal that the Stark spectrum of the Q(x) and Q(y) transitions of the pheophytins has a second-derivative line shape, indicating that the Stark effect is dominated by differences in the dipole moment between the ground and the electronically excited states of these transitions (Delta mu). The Delta mu values for the Q(x) and Q(y) transitions of H(B) are small (Delta mu = 0.6-1.0 D f(-1)), whereas that of the Q(x) transition of the active pheophytin H(A) is remarkably large (Delta mu = 3 D f(-1)). The Stark spectrum of the red-most absorbing pigments also shows a second-derivative line shape, but this spectrum is considerably red-shifted as compared to the second derivative of the absorption spectrum. This situation is unusual but has been observed before in heterodimer special pair mutants of purple bacterial reaction centers [Moore, L. J., Zhou, H., and Boxer, S. G. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 11949-11960]. The red-shifted Stark spectra can be explained by a mixing of exciton states with a charge-transfer state of about equal energy. We conclude that the charge transfer state involves H(A) and its immediate chlorophyll neighbor (B(A)), and we suggest that this (B(A)(delta+)H(A)(delta-)) charge transfer state plays a crucial role in the primary charge separation reaction in photosystem II. In contrast to most other carotenes, the two beta-carotene molecules of the photosystem II reaction center display a very small Delta mu, which can most easily be explained by excitonic coupling of both molecules. These results favor a model that locates both beta-carotene molecules at the same side of the complex.  相似文献   

3.
The change in permanent dipole moment (magnitude of delta mu) for the transition from the 1La state to the ground state of tryptophan is the key photophysical parameter for the interpretation of tryptophan fluorescence spectra in terms of static and dynamic dielectric properties of the surrounding medium. We report measurement of this parameter by means of electric field effect (Stark) spectroscopy for N-acetyl-L-tryptophanamide (NATA) in two solvents, the single tryptophan containing peptide melittin, and 5-methoxytryptophan. The values ranged from 5.9 to 6.2 +/- 0.4 Debye/f for NATA and melittin, where f represents the local field correction. The 1Lb magnitude of delta mu was much smaller. Application of Stark spectroscopy to these chromophores required decomposition of the near-UV absorption into the 1La and 1Lb bands by measurement of the fluorescence excitation anisotropy spectrum and represents an extension of the method to systems where band overlap would normally preclude quantitative analysis of the Stark spectrum. The results obtained for 5-methoxytryptophan point out limitations of this method of spectral decomposition. The relevance of these results to the interpretation of steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy of tryptophan is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of an external electric field on the optical absorption spectra of wild-type Rhodobacter capsulatus and two Rb. capsulatus reaction centers that have been genetically modified through site-directed mutagenesis (HisM200----LeuM200 and HisM200----PheM200) was measured at 77 K. The two genetically modified reaction centers replace histidine M200, the axial ligand to the M-side bacteriochlorophyll of the special pair, with either leucine or phenylalanine. These substitutions result in the replacement of the M-side bacteriochlorophyll with bacteriopheophytin, forming a bacteriochlorophyll-bacteriopheophytin heterodimer. The magnitude of the change in dipole moment from the ground to excited state (delta mu app) and the angle delta between the Qy transition moment and the direction of delta mu app were measured for the special pair absorption band for all three reaction centers. The values for delta mu app and delta obtained for wild-type Rb. capsulatus (delta mu app = 6.7 +/- 1.0 D, delta = 38 +/- 3 degrees) were the same within experimental error as those of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodopseudomonas viridis. The values for delta mu app and delta obtained for the red-most Stark band of both heterodimers were the same, but delta mu was substantially different from that of wild-type reaction centers (HisM200----LeuM200, delta mu app greater than or equal to 14.1 D and delta = 33 +/- 3 degrees; HisM200----PheM200, delta mu app greater than or equal to 15.7 D and delta = 31 +/- 4 degrees).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
We have probed the absorption changes due to an externally applied electric field (Stark effect) of Photosystem I (PSI) core complexes from the cyanobacteria Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, Synechococcus elongatus and Spirulina platensis. The results reveal that the so-called C719 chlorophylls in S. elongatus and S. platensis are characterized by very large polarizability differences between the ground and electronically excited states (with Tr(Δα) values up to about 1000 Å3 f−2) and by moderately high change in permanent dipole moments (with average Δμ values between 2 and 3 D f−1). The C740 chlorophylls in S. platensis and, in particular, the C708 chlorophylls in all three species give rise to smaller Stark shifts, which are, however, still significantly larger than those found before for monomeric chlorophyll. The results confirm the hypothesis that these states originate from strongly coupled chlorophyll a molecules. The absorption and Stark spectra of the β-carotene molecules are almost identical in all complexes and suggest similar or slightly higher values for Tr(Δα) and Δμ than for those of β-carotene in solution. Oxidation of P700 did not significantly change the Stark response of the carotenes and the red antenna states C719 and C740, but revealed in all PSI complexes changes around 700-705 and 690-693 nm, which we attribute to the change in permanent dipole moments of reduced P700 and the chlorophylls responsible for the strong absorption band at 690 nm with oxidized P700, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
Using a specially developed phosporoscopic attachment to spectropolarimeter, light induced spectra of circular dichroism (CD) in region 600-750 nm were measured for a pigment protein complex of photosystem 1 (PC-1) isolated from pea chloroplast (chlorophyll : P700 = 40). Minor components at 672 and 678 nm are observed in light induced spectra besides the components of dimer splitting of P700 Qy transition at 691 and 698 nm. Haussian deconvolution of light induced CD spectra of P700 and low temperature CD spectrum of PC-1 indicates that minor components are due to forms of antenna chlorophylls Chl672 and Chl678, rotational strength of that is changed by 2-4% as a result of P700 oxidation. Long term incubation of PC-1 with Triton X-100 inhibits P700 and destroys longwave optically active chlorophyll forms. A strong relation between dichroic density of 693 nm band in CD spectrum of PC-1 and the value of light induced absorption change at 698 nm could be used to determine P700 concentration on the basis of CD spectrum of PC-1. Such a relation shows that Chl693 is an important component of photo-system 1 reaction center. It is suggested that P700 is not an isolated dimer but it is included in the local complex from 8-10 chlorophyll molecules (Chl672, Chl678, Chl686, Chl693).  相似文献   

7.
Chlorophyll-protein complexes of barley photosystem I   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Photosystem I (PSI) preparations with a chlorophyll a/b ratio of 6.0 were isolated from barley thylakoids using two different methods. The high-molecular-mass complex (CP1a) which is resolved by non-denaturing gel electrophoresis had the same properties as a PSI preparation (PSI-200) isolated by Triton X-100 solubilisation of thylakoids followed by sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation. This material had a chlorophyll:P700 ratio of 208:1 and was composed of three different chlorophyll-protein complexes which could be separated from each other by solubilising the PSI preparation in dodecyl maltoside followed by sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation. Approximately half of the chlorophyll, including all the chlorophyll b, was located in two antenna complexes designated LHCI-680 and LHCI-730, which were identified by their characteristic low-temperature fluorescence emission spectra. The rest of the chlorophyll a was associated with the PSI reaction centre, P700 Chla-P1, which fluoresced at 720 nm. Each chlorophyll-protein complex had a unique polypeptide composition and characteristic circular dichroic and absorption spectra. The use of dodecyl maltoside instead of dodecyl sulphate resulted in a less denatured form of LHCI-680, which fluoresced at 690 nm at 77 K. One of the sucrose gradient fractions contained a complex consisting of only LHCI-730 and P700 Chla-P1 which fluoresced at 731 nm, indicating that LHCI-730 is structurally associated with P700 Chla-P1 and quenches its fluorescence. Approximately three-quarters of the light-harvesting antenna chlorophyll was in LHCI-730, but only about one-quarter of the normal complement of LHCI-730 was required to quench the reaction centre. By reducing the amount of Triton relative to the chlorophyll concentration, a PSI preparation (chlorophyll a/b ratio of 3.5) with a chlorophyll:P700 ratio of 300:1 was isolated. It contained no photosystem II, but a significant amount of LHCII which was functionally connected to the PSI reaction centre. Reconstitution studies demonstrated that excitation energy transfer from LHCII to PSI requires the presence of LHCI-680, and we propose that, in PSI, the following linear excitation energy transfer sequence occurs: LHCII----LHCI-680----LHCI-730----P700 Chla-P1.  相似文献   

8.
J Breton  E Nabedryk  W Leibl 《Biochemistry》1999,38(36):11585-11592
The effect of global (15)N or (2)H labeling on the light-induced P700(+)/P700 FTIR difference spectra has been investigated in photosystem I samples from Synechocystis at 90 K. The small isotope-induced frequency shifts of the carbonyl modes observed in the P700(+)/P700 spectra are compared to those of isolated chlorophyll a. This comparison shows that bands at 1749 and 1733 cm(-)(1) and at 1697 and 1637 cm(-)(1), which upshift upon formation of P700(+), are candidates for the 10a-ester and 9-keto C=O groups of P700, respectively. A broad and relatively weak band peaking at 3300 cm(-)(1), which does not shift upon global labeling or (1)H-(2)H exchange, is ascribed to an electronic transition of P700(+), indicating that at least two chlorophyll a molecules (denoted P(1) and P(2)) participate in P700(+). Comparisons of the (3)P700/P700 FTIR difference spectrum at 90 K with spectra of triplet formation in isolated chlorophyll a or in RCs from photosystem II or purple bacteria identify the bands at 1733 and 1637 cm(-)(1), which downshift upon formation of (3)P700, as the 10a-ester and 9-keto C=O modes, respectively, of the half of P700 that bears the triplet (P(1)). Thus, while the P(2) carbonyls are free from interaction, both the 10a-ester and the 9-keto C=O of P(1) are hydrogen bonded and the latter group is drastically perturbed compared to chlorophyll a in solution. The Mg atoms of P(1) and P(2) appear to be five-coordinated. No localization of the triplet on the P(2) half of P700 is observed in the temperature range of 90-200 K. Upon P700 photooxidation, the 9-keto C=O bands of P(1) and P(2) upshift by almost the same amount, giving rise to the 1656(+)/1637(-) and 1717(+)/1697(-) cm(-)(1) differential signals, respectively. The relative amplitudes of these differential signals, as well as of those of the 10a-ester C=O modes, appear to be slightly dependent on sample orientation and temperature and on the organism used to generate the P700(+)/P700 spectrum. If it is assumed that the charge density on ring V of chlorophyll a, as measured by the perturbation of the 10a-ester or 9-keto C=O IR vibrations, mainly reflects the spin density on the two halves of the oxidized P700 special pair, a charge distribution ranging from 1:1 to 2:1 (in favor of P(2)) is deduced from the measurements presented here. The extreme downshift of the 9-keto C=O group of P(1), indicative of an unusually strong hydrogen bond, is discussed in relation with the models previously proposed for the PSI special pair.  相似文献   

9.
Molecular changes associated with the photooxidation of the primary electron donor P700 in photosystem I from cyanobacteria have been investigated with Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy. Highly resolved signals are observed in the carbonyl stretching frequency region of the light-induced FTIR spectra. In order to assign and to interpret these signals, the FTIR spectra of isolated chlorophyll a and pyrochlorophyll a (lacking the 10a-ester carbonyl) in both their neutral and cation states were investigated. Comparison of the redox-induced FTIR difference spectra of these two model compounds demonstrates that upon chlorophyll a cation formation in tetrahydrofuran the 7c-ester carbonyl is essentially unperturbed while the 10a-ester carbonyl is upshifted from 1738 to 1751 cm-1. For the 9-keto group, the shift is from 1693 to 1718 cm-1 in chlorophyll a and from 1686 to 1712 cm-1 in pyrochlorophyll a. The 1718-cm-1 band in the difference spectrum of chlorophyll a is thus unambiguously assigned to the 9-keto carbonyl of the cation. Comparison of the light-induced FTIR difference spectrum associated with the photooxidation of P700 in vivo with the difference FTIR spectrum of chlorophyll a cation formation leads to the assignment of the frequencies of the 9-keto carbonyl group(s) at 1700 cm-1 in P700 and at 1717 cm-1 in P700+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Low-temperature resonance Raman (RR) spectra have been obtained at resonance with the Soret transition of chlorophyll a in photosystem I particles containing large amounts either of the triplet state of P700 or of its radical cation state. Subtracting these spectra from those of resting reaction centers yielded RR spectra of P700 in its neutral, ground state. These spectra arise from two distinct chlorophyll a molecules differing by the strengths of the bonding interactions assumed by their keto carbonyl groups, the stretching frequencies of which are found at 1655 and 1675 cm-1. The present results rule out previous hypotheses that P700 might have consisted of a single, chemically modified chlorophyll a molecule. Neither of the bonding interactions assumed by the keto carbonyls of the P700 chlorophylls most probably involves chlorophyll-chlorophyll bridging through water molecules, as surmised in the so-called special pair models, but likely consists of H bonds with distinct protein sites. The magnesium atoms of the two P700 chlorophylls are 5-coordinated. Hence, the structural model of P700 provided by the present data is qualitatively the same, in terms of bonding interactions, as that currently accepted for the bacterial primary donor.  相似文献   

11.
G Hastings  V M Ramesh  R Wang  V Sivakumar  A Webber 《Biochemistry》2001,40(43):12943-12949
Light-induced Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy has been used to study the photo-oxidation of the primary electron donor (P700) in PS I particles from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. To aid in the interpretation of the spectra, PS I particles from a site-directed mutant of C. reinhardtii, in which the axial histidine ligand (HisA676) was changed to serine, were also studied. A high-frequency (3300-2600 cm(-1)) electronic transition is observed for all PS I particles, demonstrating that P700 is dimeric. The electronic band is, however, species-dependent, indicating some differences in the electronic structure of P700 and/or P700(+) in C. reinhardtii and Synechocystis sp. 6803. For PS I particles from C. reinhardtii, substitution of HisA676 with serine has little effect on the ester carbonyl modes of the chlorophylls of P700. However, the keto carbonyl modes are considerably altered. Comparison of (P700(+) - P700) FTIR difference spectra obtained using PS I particles from the wild type (WT) and the HS(A676) mutant of C. reinhardtii indicates that the mutation primarily exerts its influence on the P700 ground state. The 13(1) keto carbonyls of the chlorophylls of P700 of the wild type absorb at similar frequencies, which has previously made these transitions difficult to resolve. However, for the HS(A676) mutant, the 13(1) keto carbonyl of chlorophyll a or chlorophyll a' of P700 on PsaB or PsaA absorbs at 1703.4 or 1694.2 cm(-1), respectively, allowing their unambiguous resolution. Upon P700(+) formation, in both PS I particles from C. reinhardtii, the higher-frequency carbonyl band upshifts by approximately 14 cm(-1) while the lower frequency carbonyl downshifts by approximately 10 cm(-1). The similarity in the spectra for WT PS I particles from C. reinhardtii and Synechocystis sp. 6803 indicates that a similar interpretation is probably valid for PS I particles from both species. The mutant results allow for an interpretation of the behavior of the 13(1) keto carbonyls of P700 that is different from previous work [Breton, J., Nabedryk, E., and Leibl, W. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 11585-11592], in which it was suggested that 13(1) keto carbonyls of P700 absorb at 1697 and 1639 cm(-1), and upshift by 21 cm(-1) upon cation formation. The interpretation of the spectra reported here is more in line with recent results from ENDOR spectroscopy and high-resolution crystallography.  相似文献   

12.
The circular dichroism (CD) method was applied to study the molecular organization of P700, antenna chlorophyll and protein of photosystem 1 complexes (CP1), isolated from chloroplasts under mild treatment with Triton X-100. Analysis of CD spectra and protein: chlorophyll: P700 ratios for CP1 complexes that were different in their chlorophyll content indicate that CP1 preparations can be considered as a mixture of CP1-RC, containing P700 (10–20%), and CP1-LH without P700 (80–90%). Both types of complexes contain approximately 25 chlorophyll molecules, and the destruction of their spatial organization with detergents represents a cooperative transition. The rate of chlorophyll destruction in CP1-LH is much higher than that in CP1-RC. In both complexes a 65 kDa polypeptide predominates, whose secondary structure (typical for / proteins) is stable to Triton X-100 and does not depends on the chlorophyll content. Chlorophyll seems to be grouped in clusters (5–7 molecules) in the hydrophobic cores of 2–3 parallel / domains of the 65 kDa protein. Only one of the clusters in CP1-RC includes P700; on P700 photooxidation the change of its interaction with the nearest pigment environment results in a complicated shape of the light-induced CD spectra.Abbreviations PS1 photosystem 1 - CP1 pigment-protein complex of PS1 - Chl chlorophyll a - CP1-140 CP1 with ratio Ch1:P700 140 - RC reaction center - LH light-harvesting pigment - CP1-RC CP1, containing P700 - CP1-LH CP1 without P700 (containing LH) - CD circular dichroism - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate Dedicated to Prof. L.N.M. Duysens on the occasion of his retirement  相似文献   

13.
The oxidation-reduction potential of the reaction-centre chlorophyll of Photosystem I (P700) in spinach chloroplasts was determined by using the ability of the reaction centre to photoreduce the bound ferredoxin and to photo-oxidize P700 on illumination at 20K as an indicator of the oxidation state of P700. This procedure shows that P700 is oxidized with Em (pH8.0)(mid-point redox potential at pH8.0)congruent to +375mV. Further oxidation of the chloroplast preparations by high concentrations of K3Fe(CN)6(10mM) in the presence of mediating dyes leads to the appearance of a large radical signal with an apparent Em congruent to +470mVA second, light-inducible, radical also appears over the same potential range. We propose that these signals are due to bulk chlorophyll oxidation and not, as was previously thought [Knaff & Malkin (1973) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 159, 555-562], to reaction-centre oxidation. A number of optical techniques were used to determine Em of P700. Dual-wavelength spectroscopy (697-720nm) indicates Em congruent to +460-+480mV. The spectrum of the sample during the titration showed a large contribution to the signal by bulk chlorophyll oxidation, in agreement with the electron-paramagnetic-resonance results and those of Ke, Sugahara & Shaw [(1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 408, 12-25]. The light-induced absorbance change at 435 nm, usually attributed to P700, showed a potential dependence similar to that of bulk chlorophyll oxidation. Determination of Em of P700 on the basis of the appearance of the P700 signal in oxidized-versus-reduced difference spectra showed Em (pH8.0) congruent to +360mV. Measurements of the effect of potential on the irreversible photo-oxidation of P700 at 77K showed that P700 became oxidized in this potential range. We conclude that the reaction-centre chlorophyll of Photosystem I has Em (pH8.0) congruent to +375mV.  相似文献   

14.
Mi D  Lin S  Blankenship RE 《Biochemistry》1999,38(46):15231-15237
Picosecond transient absorption difference spectroscopy in the blue wavelength region (380-500 nm) was used to study the early electron acceptors in photosystem I. Samples were photosystem I core particles with about 100 chlorophylls per reaction center isolated from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. After excitation at 590 nm at room temperature, decay-associated spectra (DAS) were determined from global analysis in the blue region, yielding two transient components and one nondecaying component. A 3 ps decay phase is interpreted as primarily due to antenna excited-state redistribution. A 28 ps decay phase is interpreted as due to overall excited-state decay by electron transfer. The nondecaying component is ascribed to the difference spectrum of P(700) and the quinone or A(1) electron acceptor (P(700)(+)A(1)(-) - P(700)A(1)). Decay curves on the millisecond time scale at different wavelengths were measured with an autoxidizable artificial electron acceptor, benzyl viologen, and the (P(700)(+) - P(700)) difference spectrum was constructed. The (A(1)(-) - A(1)) difference spectrum was obtained by taking the difference between the above two difference spectra. A parallel picosecond experiment under strongly reducing conditions was also done as a control experiment. These conditions stabilize the electron on an earlier acceptor, A(0). The nondecaying component of the DAS at low potential was assigned to (P(700)(+)A(0)(-) - P(700)A(0)) since the electron-transfer pathway from A(0) to A(1) was blocked. The [(P(700)(+)A(0)(-) - P(700)A(0)) - (P(700)(+) - P(700))] subtraction gives a spectrum, interpreted as the (A(0)(-) - A(0)) difference spectrum of a chlorophyll a molecule, consistent with previous studies. The (A(1)(-) - A(1)) spectrum resolved on the picosecond time scale shows significant differences with similar spectra measured on longer time scales. These differences may be due to electrochromic effects and spectral evolution.  相似文献   

15.
《FEBS letters》1987,214(1):97-100
The 65 kDa polypeptide subunit depleted of P700 was prepared from a photosystem I reaction center preparation and mixed with chlorophyll a′ (C-10 epimer of chlorophyll a) to yield a complex exhibiting a tripleheaded spectrum with absorbance maxima at 673, 692 and 707 nm. The difference spectra (oxidized-minus-untreated and light-minus-dark) had a major trough at 707 nm and minor ones at 690 and 430 nm. The overall shape of the spectra resembled well that of P700 with a small red shift. A rapidly decaying flash-induced absorbance change was observed at 430 nm with a half decay time of less than 500 μs in a preparation supplemented with an electron donor system.  相似文献   

16.
The primary electron donor of photosystem I (PS1), called P(700), is a heterodimer of chlorophyll (Chl) a and a'. The crystal structure of photosystem I reveals that the chlorophyll a' (P(A)) could be hydrogen-bonded to the protein via a threonine residue, while the chlorophyll a (P(B)) does not have such a hydrogen bond. To investigate the influence of this hydrogen bond on P(700), PsaA-Thr739 was converted to alanine to remove the H-bond to the 13(1)-keto group of the chlorophyll a' in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The PsaA-T739A mutant was capable of assembling active PS1. Furthermore the mutant PS1 contained approximately one chlorophyll a' molecule per reaction center, indicating that P(700) was still a Chl a/a' heterodimer in the mutant. However, the mutation induced several band shifts in the visible P(700)(+) - P(700) absorbance difference spectrum. Redox titration of P(700) revealed a 60 mV decrease in the P(700)/P(700)(+) midpoint potential of the mutant, consistent with loss of a H-bond. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy indicates that the ground state of P(700) is somewhat modified by mutation of ThrA739 to alanine. Comparison of FTIR difference band shifts upon P(700)(+) formation in WT and mutant PS1 suggests that the mutation modifies the charge distribution over the pigments in the P(700)(+) state, with approximately 14-18% of the positive charge on P(B) in WT being relocated onto P(A) in the mutant. (1)H-electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) analysis of the P(700)(+) cation radical was also consistent with a slight redistribution of spin from the P(B) chlorophyll to P(A), as well as some redistribution of spin within the P(B) chlorophyll. High-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at 330-GHz was used to resolve the g-tensor of P(700)(+), but no significant differences from wild-type were observed, except for a slight decrease of anisotropy. The mutation did, however, provoke changes in the zero-field splitting parameters of the triplet state of P(700) ((3)P(700)), as determined by EPR. Interestingly, the mutation-induced change in asymmetry of P(700) did not cause an observable change in the directionality of electron transfer within PS1.  相似文献   

17.
The primary electron donor P700 of photosystem I is a dimer comprised of chlorophyll a (P(B)) and chlorophyll a' (P(A)). P(A) is involved in a hydrogen bond network with several surrounding amino acid residues and a nearby water molecule. To investigate the influence of hydrogen bond interactions on the properties of P700, the threonine at position A739, which donates a putative hydrogen bond to the 13(1)-keto group of P(A), was replaced with valine, histidine, and tyrosine in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii using site-directed mutagenesis. Growth of the mutants was not impaired. (i) The (P700(+)* - P700) FTIR difference spectra of the mutants lack a negative band at 1634 cm(-1) observed in the wild-type spectrum and instead exhibit a new negative band between 1658 and 1672 cm(-1) depending on the mutation. This band can therefore be assigned to the 13(1)-keto group of P(A) which is upshifted to higher frequencies upon removal of the hydrogen bond. (ii) The main bleaching band in the Q(y)() region of the (P700(+)* - P700) and ((3)P700 - P700) absorption difference spectra is blue shifted for the mutants by approximately 6 nm compared to that of the wild type. A blue shift is also observed for the main bleaching in the Soret region. (iii) The (P700(+)* - P700) CD difference spectrum of the wild type reveals two bands at 694 nm (positive CD) and 680 nm (negative CD) of approximately equal area. For each mutant, these two components are blue-shifted to the same extent. The results strongly suggest that a blue shift of the Q(y) absorption band of P(A) is responsible for a blue shift of the exciton bands. (iv) Redox titrations yielded a decrease in the midpoint potential for the oxidation of P700 by 32 mV for the exchange of Thr against Val. (v) ENDOR spectroscopy shows that the hfc of the methyl protons at position 12 of the spin-carrying Chl P(B) is decreased due to the removal of the hydrogen bond to P(A). This indicates a redistribution of spin density in P700(+)* compared to that in the wild type. This gives evidence for an electronic coupling between the two halves of the dimer in the wild type and mutants.  相似文献   

18.
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) difference spectroscopy in combination with deuterium exchange experiments has been used to study the photo-oxidation of P740, the primary electron donor in photosystem I from Acaryochloris marina. Comparison of (P740(+)-P740) and (P700(+)-P700) FTIR difference spectra show that P700 and P740 share many structural similarities. However, there are several distinct differences also: 1), The (P740(+)-P740) FTIR difference spectrum is significantly altered upon proton exchange, considerably more so than the (P700(+)-P700) FTIR difference spectrum. The P740 binding pocket is therefore more accessible than the P700 binding pocket. 2), Broad, "dimer" absorption bands are observed for both P700(+) and P740(+). These bands differ significantly in substructure, however, suggesting differences in the electronic organization of P700(+) and P740(+). 3), Bands are observed at 2727(-) and 2715(-) cm(-1) in the (P740(+)-P740) FTIR difference spectrum, but are absent in the (P700(+)-P700) FTIR difference spectrum. These bands are due to formyl CH modes of chlorophyll d. Therefore, P740 consists of two chlorophyll d molecules. Deuterium-induced modification of the (P740(+)-P740) FTIR difference spectrum indicates that only the highest frequency 13(3) ester carbonyl mode of P740 downshifts, indicating that this ester mode is weakly H-bonded. In contrast, the highest frequency ester carbonyl mode of P700 is free from H-bonding. Deuterium-induced changes in (P740(+)-P740) FTIR difference spectrum could also indicate that one of the chlorophyll d 3(1) carbonyls of P740 is hydrogen bonded.  相似文献   

19.
Photosystem 1 (PS1) enriched preparations have been extracted from the cyanobacterium Chlorogloea fritschii grown either in darkness or in the light. Absorption spectra show that the main chlorophyll peak has shifted from 678 nm in PS1 from light grown cells to 675 nm in PS1 from dark grown cells. Fluorescence spectra show a similar blue shift in wavelength maximum from 690 nm to 678 nm and the fluorescence intensity is higher in PS1 from dark grown cells. Allophycocyanin is present in PS1 from light grown cells, but absent from preparations from C. fritschii grown in the dark. P700: chlorophyll a ratios of the preparations from light and dark grown cells are 1:35 and 1:80 respectively, all P700 being photoactive. The results are interpreted to suggest that allophycocyanin is not attached to PS1 in dark grown C. fritschii, neither is all chlorophyll arranged in such a way as to ensure efficient energy transfer to P700.  相似文献   

20.
Kinetics of fluorescence at room temperature, electron transport and photooxidation of P700 and cytochrome f have been studied in chloroplasts isolated from active and winter stressed Pinus silvestris. The winter stress induced block in the electron transport chain between the two photosystems is close to the site of plastoquinone, since winter stress and DCMU caused the same type of inhibition of the reoxidation of the primary electron acceptor Q of photosystem II. No winter inhibition of the electron transport between cytochrome f and P700 was observed. Time course studies of P700 photooxidation in chloroplasts of active and winter stressed pine have shown that the photosynthetic unit size must be about equal in the two types of chloroplasts. An apparent increase of the photosynthetic unit size was induced by winter stress, as revealed by the high chlorophyll/P700 ratio of winter stressed pine. The phenomenon is explained by the formation of photosynthetically inactive chlorophyll. Low-temperature fluorescence emission spectra were recorded when either chlorophyll a (433 nm) or chlorophyll b (477 nm) were preferentially excited. Winter stress induced the formation of a chlorophyll a fraction emitting at 673 nm. This chlorophyll is most likely derived from the chlorophyll a antennae of the two photosystems, and it probably contributes to the photosynthetically inactive pool of chlorophyll in winter stressed pine. The light harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex is relatively resistant to winter stress.  相似文献   

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