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1.
1. The kinetics of cytochrome b reduction and oxidation in the ubiquinone-cytochrome b/c2 oxidoreductase of chromatophores from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides Ga have been measured both in the presence and absence of anti-mycin, after subtraction of contributions due to absorption changes from cytochrome c2, the oxidized bacteriochlorophyll dimer of the reaction center, and a red shift of the antenna bacteriochlorophyll.2. A small red shift of the antenna bacteriochlorophyll band centered at 589 nm has been identified and found to be kinetically similar to the carotenoid bandshift.3. Antimycin inhibits the oxidation of ferrocytochrome b under all conditions; it also stimulates the amount of single flash activated cytochrome b reduction 3- to 4-fold under certain if not all conditions.4. A maximum of approximately 0.6 cytochrome b-560 (Em(7) = 50 mV, n = 1, previously cytochrome b50) hemes per reaction center are reduced following activating flashes. This ratio suggests that there is one cytochrome b-560 heme functional per ubiquinone-cytochrome b/c2 oxidoreductase.5. Under the experimental conditions used here, only cytochrome b-560 is observed functional in cyclic electron transfer.6. We describe the existence of three distinct states of reduction of the ubiquinone-cytochrome b/c2 oxidoreductase which can be established before activation, and result in markedly different reaction sequences involving cytochrome b after the flash activation. Poising such that the special ubiquinone (Qz) is reduced and cytochrome b-560 is oxidized yields the conditions for optimal flash activated electron transfer rates through the ubiquinone-cytochrome b/c2 oxidoreductase. However when the ambient redox state is lowered to reduce cytochrome b-560 or raised to oxidize Qz, single turnover flash induced electron transfer through the ubiquinone-cytochrome b/c2 oxidoreductase appears impeded; the points of the impediment are tentatively identified with the electron transfer step from the reduced secondary quinone (QII) of the reaction center to ferricytochrome b-560 and from the ferrocytochrome b-560 to oxidized Qz, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
Yusuke Tsukatani  Chihiro Azai  Shigeru Itoh 《BBA》2008,1777(9):1211-1217
We studied the regulation mechanism of electron donations from menaquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase and cytochrome c-554 to the type I homodimeric photosynthetic reaction center complex of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum. We measured flash-induced absorption changes of multiple cytochromes in the membranes prepared from a mutant devoid of cytochrome c-554 or in the reconstituted membranes by exogenously adding cytochrome c-555 purified from Chlorobium limicola. The results indicated that the photo-oxidized cytochrome cz bound to the reaction center was rereduced rapidly by cytochrome c-555 as well as by the menaquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase and that cytochrome c-555 did not function as a shuttle-like electron carrier between the menaquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase and cytochrome cz. It was also shown that the rereduction rate of cytochrome cz by cytochrome c-555 was as high as that by the menaquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase. The two electron-transfer pathways linked to sulfur metabolisms seem to function independently to donate electrons to the reaction center.  相似文献   

3.
In chromatophores from the facultative photosynthetic bacterium, Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, Ga, the function of ubiquinone-10 (UQ-10) at two specialized binding sites (QB and QZ) has been determined by kinetic criteria. These were the rate of rereduction of flash-oxidized [BChl]2+ through the back reaction, or the binary pattern of cytochrome b561 (for the Qb site), and the rapid rate of rereduction of flash-oxidized cytochrome c, or the relative amplitude of the antimycin-sensitive Phase III (t12 ~ 1.5 ms) of the carotenoid spectral shift induced by a single turnover flash at Eh ~ 100 mV (for the QZ site). The phenomenon associated with the two binding sites behaved differently on extraction of UQ from lyophilized chromatophores using isooctane. By this selective extraction procedure it has been possible to show that UQ-10 molecules are required at different concentrations in the membrane for specific redox events in secondary electron transfer. The reduction of cytochrome b occurs in particles which no longer show the phenomena associated with QZ, but still possess a large proportion of Qb, while rapid rereduction of flash-oxidized cytochrome c requires an additional complement of UQ-10 (QZ). Extracted particles lacking QZ and a large amount of QB have been reconstituted with different UQ homologs (UQ-1, UQ-3, and UQ-10). Specific redox events have been studied in reconstituted particles. All UQ homologs act as secondary acceptors from the reaction center; UQ-3 and UQ-10, but not UQ-1, are also able to reconstitute the function of QZ as electron donor to cytochrome c. Only UQ-10, however, is able to restore normal rates of the overall cyclic electron transfer induced by a train of flashes, and maximal rates of the light-induced ATP synthesis. The results are interpreted in terms of Q-cycle mechanisms in which quinone and quinol at both the QZ and Qb sites are in rapid equilibrium with the quinone pool.  相似文献   

4.
Three c-type cytochromes isolated from Nitrobacter agilis were purified to apparent homogeneity: cytochrome c-553, cytochrome c-550 and cytochrome c-549, 554. Their amino acid composition and other properties were studied. Cytochrome c-553 was isolated as a partially reduced form and could not be oxidized by ferricyanide. The completely reduced form of the cytochrome had absorption maxima at 419, 524 and 553 nm. It had a molecular weight of 25 000 and dissociated into two polypeptides of equal size of 11 500 during SDS gel electrophoresis. The isoelectric point of cytochrome c-553 was pH 6.8. The ferricytochrome c-550 exhibited an absorption peak at 410 nm and the ferrocytochrome c showed peaks at 416, 521 and 550 nm. The molecular weight of the cytochrome estimated by gel filtration and by SDS gel electrophoresis was 12 500. It had an Em(7) value of 0.27 V and isoelectric point pH 8.51. The N-terminal sequence of cytochrome c-550 showed a clear homology with the corresponding portions of the sequences of other c-type cytochromes. Cytochrome c-549, 554 possessed atypical absorption spectra with absorption peaks at 402 nm as oxidized form and at 419, 523, 549 and 554 nm when reduced with Na2S2O4. Its molecular weight estimated by gel filtration and SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was 90 000 and 46 000, respectively. The cytochrome had an isoelectric point of pH 5.6. Cytochrome c-549, 554 was highly autoxidizable.  相似文献   

5.
The technique of resonance X-ray diffraction (Blasie, J.K. and Stamatoff, J. (1981) Annu. Rev. Biophys. Bioeng. 10, 451–452) utilizing synchrotron radiation was used to determine the locations of the cytochrome c heme iron atom and the photosynthetic reaction center iron atom within the profile of a reconstituted membrane. The accuracy of these determinations was better than ±2 ?. The cytochrome c heme iron atom → reaction center iron atom vector was determined to have a magnitude of approx. 44 ? projected onto the membrane profile and to span most of the lipid hydrocarbon core of the membrane profile. Since the reaction center iron atom interacts magnetically with the primary quinone electron acceptor QI over a distance of less than 10 ?, the primary light-induced electron-transfer reactions for this system generate the electric charge separation between oxidized cytochrome c+ and Fe-Q?I across most (approx. 23) of the membrane profile including most or all of the lipid hydrocarbon core of the membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Incubation of PS II membranes with herbicides results in changes in EPR signals arising from reaction centre components. Dinoseb, a phenolic herbicide which binds to the reaction centre polypeptide, changes the width and form of the EPR signal arising from photoreduced Q?AFe. o-Phenanthroline slightly broadens the Q?AFe signal. These effects are attributed to changes in the interaction between the semi-quinone and the iron. DCMU, which binds to the 32 kDa protein, has virtually no effect on the width of the Q?AFe signal but does give rise to an increase in its amplitude. This could result from a change in redox state of an interacting component. Herbicide effects can also be seen when Q?AFe is chemically reduced and these seen to be reflected by changes in splitting and amplitude of the split pheophytin? signal. Dinoseb also results in the loss of ‘Signal II dark’, the conversion of reduced high-potential cytochrome b559 to its oxidized low-potential form and the presence of transiently photooxidized carotenoid after a flash at 25°C; these effects indicate that dinoseb may also act as an ADRY reagent.  相似文献   

7.
(1) The role of the ubiquinone pool in the reactions of the cyclic electron-transfer chain has been investigated by observing the effects of reduction of the ubiquinone pool on the kinetics and extent of the cytochrome and electrochromic carotenoid absorbance changes following flash illumination. (2) In the presence of antimycin, flash-induced reduction of cytochrome b-561 is dependent on a coupled oxidation of ubiquinol. The ubiquinol oxidase site of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase catalyses a concerted reaction in which one electron is transferred to a high-potential chain containing cytochromes c1 and c2, the Rieske-type iron-sulfur center, and the reaction center primary donor, and a second electron is transferred to a low-potential chain containing cytochromes b-566 and b-561. (3) The rate of reduction of cytochrome b-561 in the presence of antimycin has been shown to reflect the rate of turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. This diagnostic feature has been used to measure the dependence of the kinetics of the site on the ubiquinol concentration. Over a limited range of concentration (0–3 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561), the kinetics showed a second-order process, first order with respect to ubiquinol from the pool. At higher ubiquinol concentrations, other processes became rate determining, so that above approx. 25 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561, no further increase in rate was seen. (4) The kinetics and extents of cytochrome b-561 reduction following a flash in the presence of antimycin, and of the antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c1 and c2, and the slow phase of the carotenoid change, have been measured as a function of redox potential over a wide range. The initial rate for all these processes increased on reduction of the suspension over the range between 180 and 100 mV (pH 7). The increase in rate occurred as the concentration of ubiquinol in the pool increased on reduction, and could be accounted for in terms of the increased rate of ubiquinol oxidation. It is not necessary to postulate the presence of a tightly bound quinone at this site with altered redox properties, as has been previously assumed. (5) The antimycin-sensitive reactions reflect the turnover of a second catalytic site of the complex, at which cytochrome b-561 ix oxidized in an electrogenic reaction. We propose that ubiquinone is reduced at this site with a mechanism similar to that of the two-electron gate of the reaction center. We suggest that antimycin binds at this site, and displaces the quinone species so that all reactions at the site are inhibited. (6) In coupled chromatophores, the turnover of the ubiquinone reductase site can be measured by the antimycin-sensitive slow phase of the electrochromic carotenoid change. At redox potentials higher than 180 mV, where the pool is completely oxidized, the maximal extent of the slow phase is half that at 140 mV, where the pool contains approx. 1 mol ubiquinone/mol cytochrome b-561 before the flash. At both potentials, cytochrome b-561 became completely reduced following one flash in the presence of antimycin. The results are interpreted as showing that at potentials higher than 180 mV, ubiquinol stoichiometric with cytochrome b-561 reaches the complex from the reaction center. The increased extent of the carotenoid change, when one extra ubiquinol is available in the pool, is interpreted as showing that the ubiquinol oxidase site turns over twice, and the ubiquinone reductase sites turns over once, for a complete turnover of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase complex, and the net oxidation of one ubiquinol/complex. (7) The antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c1 and c2 is shown to reflect the second turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. (8) We suggest that, in the presence of antimycin, the ubiquinol oxidase site reaches a quasi equilibrium with ubiquinol from the pool and the high- and low-potential chains, and that the equilibrium constant of the reaction catalysed constrains the site to the single turnover under most conditions. (9) The results are discussed in the context of a detailed mechanism. The modified Q-cycle proposed is described by physicochemical parameters which account well for the results reported.  相似文献   

8.
Chromatophore membranes from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides activated by light display a carotenoid band shift (phase III) that occurs in response to the electrogenic event (charge separation) in the ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase. The rate of formation of this electrogenic event has previously been shown to be strongly dependent on the initial redox state of a bound ubiquinone species (designated Qz) associated with the oxidoreductase. When Qz is reduced (quinol form; QzH2) the electrogenic event takes place in less than 5 ms. When Qz is oxidized (quinone form; Qz) it is much slower; under these conditions the fact that it occurs has been ignored. In this report, we address this issue and describe events that lead to the generation of carotenoid band shift phase III when the total population of Qz of the chromatophore is oxidized before flash activation. The following characteristics are apparent: (1) When oxidized Qz is present before activation, the half-time of formation of carotenoid band-shift phase III is 10–20-times slower than when QzH2 is present before activation. (2) When oxidized Qz is present, the measured full extent of phase III generated by a single-turnover flash is diminished by about one-half of that observed when QzH2 is present before activation. (3) The rate of formation of the carotenoid band shift phase III when Qz is initially oxidized corresponds closely to the rate of completion of the flash-activated electron-transfer cycle. This can be seen under two different conditions: (a) as the partial reduction of cytochrome c1 + c2 (at redox potentials of 200–300 mV) or (b) as the partial reduction of flash-oxidized bacteriochlorophyll dimer, (BChl)2+ (at redox potentials above 300 mV). (4) At the higher redox potentials (above 300 mV), antimycin-sensitive proton binding shares a common, rate-limiting step with the carotenoid band shift phase III and (BChl)2+ reduction. (5) However, proton binding at redox potentials above 300 mV is not observed at all unless valinomycin (K+) is present. Thus, proton binding occurs only when the carotenoid band shift is collapsed in milliseconds, whereas, conversely, the carotenoid band shift is stably generated when proton binding is not observed. These and other observations are the basis of a reevaluation of our current views on the coupling of electron transfer and proton translocation in photosynthetic bacteria.  相似文献   

9.
A method is described for isolation of the Rhodopseudomonas viridis reaction center complex free of altered, 685 nm absorbing pigment. This improved preparation contains two c-type cytochromes in the ratio P-960: cytochrome c-558: cytochrome c-553 of 1 : 2 : 2 to 3. The near infrared spectral forms of the reduced preparation are located at 790, 832, 846 and 987 nm at 77 K; the oxidized complex absorbs at 790, 808, 829 and approx. 1310 nm. The 790 nm band is attributed to bacteriophaeophytin b and the other absorbances to bacteriochlorophyll b. The visible absorption bands may be assigned to these pigments and to the cytochromes present and, probably, to a carotenoid. The presence of two bacteriochlorophyll b spectral forms in the P+-830 band suggests that exciton interactions occur among pigments in the oxidized, as well as the reduced, reaction center. Changes in the 790 and 544 nm bands upon illumination of the reaction center preparation at low redox potential may be indicative of a role for bacteriophaeophytin b in primary photochemical events.  相似文献   

10.
Analysis of photosynthetic reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides strains 2.4.1 and Ga shows that each contains approx. 1 mol of a specific carotenoid per mol of reaction center. In strain 2.4.1. the carotenoid is spheroidene (1-methoxy-3,4-didehydro-1,2,7′,8′-tetrahydro-ψ,ψ-carotene); in strain Ga, it is chloroxanthin (1-hydroxy-1,2,7′,8′-tetrahydro-ψ,ψ-carotene). The carotenoid is bound to the same pair of proteins as are the bacteriochlorophylls and bacteriopheophytins of the reaction center. This binding induces strong circular dichroism in the absorption bands of the carotenoid. The carotenoid is close enough to the other pigments of the reaction center so that light energy transfers efficiently from the carotenoid to the bacteriochlorophyll, sensitizing bacteriochlorophyll fluorescence. The fluorescence polarization spectrum of the reaction centers shows that the transition vectors for the visible absorption bands of the carotenoid lie approximately parallel to the 600 nm (Qx) transition of the bacteriochlorophyll complex.  相似文献   

11.
1. In Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides the Qx absorption band of the reaction center bacteriochlorophyll dimer which bleaches on photo-oxidation is both blue-shifted and has an increased extinction coefficient on solubilisation of the chromatophore membrane with lauryldimethylamine-N-oxide. These effects may be attributable in part to the particle flattening effect.2. The difference spectrum of photo-oxidisable c type cytochrome in the chromatophore was found to have a slightly variable peak position in the α-band (λmax at 551–551.25 nm); this position was always red-shifted in comparison to that of isolated cytochrome c2 (λmax at 549.5 ± 0.5 nm). The shift in wavelength maximum was not due to association with the reaction center protein. A possible heterogeneity in the c-type cytochromes of chromatophores is discussed.3. Flash-induced difference spectra attributed to cytochrome b were resolved at several different redox potentials and in the presence and absence of antimycin. Under most conditions, one major component, cytochrome b50 appeared to be involved. However, in some circumstances, reduction of a component with the spectral characteristics of cytochrome b?90 was observed.4. Difference spectra attributed to (BChl)2, Q?II, c type cytochrome and cytochrome b50 were resolved in the Soret region for Rhodopseudomonas capsulata.5. A computer-linked kinetic spectrophotometer for obtaining automatically the difference spectra of components functioning in photosynthetic electron transfer chains is described. The system incorporates a novel method for automatically adjusting and holding the photomultiplier supply voltage.  相似文献   

12.
Roger Springett 《BBA》2021,1862(3):148352
The bc1 complex is a proton pump of the mitochondrial electron transport chain which transfers electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c. It operates via the modified Q cycle in which the two electrons from oxidation of ubiquinol at the Qo center are bifurcated such that the first electron is passed to Cytc via an iron sulfur center and c1 whereas the second electron is passed across the membrane by bL and bH to reduce ubiquinone at the Qi center. Proton pumping occurs because oxidation of ubiquinol at the Qo center releases protons to the P-side and reduction of ubiquinone at the Qi center takes up protons from the N-side. However, the mechanisms which prevent the thermodynamically more favorable short circuit reactions and so ensure precise bifurcation and proton pumping are not known. Here we use statistical thermodynamics to show that reaction steps that originate from high energy states cannot support high flux even when they have large rate constants. We show how the chemistry of ubiquinol oxidation and the structure of the Qo site can result in free energy profiles that naturally suppress flux through the short circuit pathways while allowing high rates of bifurcation. These predictions are confirmed through in-silico simulations using a Markov state model.  相似文献   

13.
The Rieske iron-sulfur center in the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides appears to be the direct electron donor to ferricytochrome c2, reducing the cytochrome on a submillisecond timescale which is slower than the rapid phase of cytochrome oxidation (t12 3–5 μs). The reduction of the ferricytochrome by the Rieske center is inhibited by 5-n-undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT) but not by antimycin. The slower (1–2 ms) antimycin-sensitive phase of ferricytochrome c2 reduction, attributed to a specific ubiquinone-10 molecule (Qz), and the associated carotenoid spectral response to membrane potential formation are also inhibited by UHDBT. Since the light-induced oxidation of the Rieske center is only observed in the presence of antimycin, it seems likely that the reduced form of Qz (QzH2) reduces the Rieske center in an antimycin-sensitive reaction. From the extent of the UHDBT-sensitive ferricytochrome c2 reduction we estimate that there are 0.7 Rieske iron-sulfur centers per reaction center.UHDBT shifts the EPR derivative absorption spectrum of the Rieske center from gy 1.90 to gy 1.89, and shifts the Em,7 from 280 to 350 mV. While this latter shift may account for the subsequent failure of the iron-sulfur center to reduce ferricytochrome c2, it is not clear how this can explain the other effects of the inhibitor, such as the prevention of cytochrome b reduction and the elimination of the uptake of H+II; these may reflect additional sites of action of the inhibitor.  相似文献   

14.
The temperature dependence of the partial reactions leading to turn-over of the UQH2:cyt c 2 oxidoreductase of Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been studied. The redox properties of the cytochrome components show a weak temperature dependence over the range 280–330 K, with coefficients of about 1 m V per degree; our results suggest that the other components show similar dependencies, so that no significant change in the gradient of standard free-energy between components occurs over this temperature range. The rates of the reactions of the high potential chain (the Rieske iron sulfur center, cytochromes c 1 and c 2, reaction center primary donor) show a weak temperature dependence, indicating an activation energy < 8 kJ per mole for electron transfer in this chain. The oxidation of ubiquinol at the Qz-site of the complex showed a strong temperature dependence, with an activation energy of about 32 kJ mole–1. The electron transfer from cytochrome b-566 to cytochrome b-561 was not rate determining at any temperature, and did not contribute to the energy barrier. The activation energy of 32 kJ mole–1 for quinol oxidation was the same for all states of the quinone pool (fully oxidized, partially reduced, or fully reduced before the flash). We suggest that the activation barrier is in the reaction by which ubiquinol at the catalytic site is oxidized to semiquinone. The most economical scheme for this reaction would have the semiquinone intermediate at the energy level indicated by the activation barrier. We discuss the plausibility of this simple model, and the values for rate constants, stability constant, the redox potentials of the intermediate couples, and the binding constant for the semiquinone, which are pertinent to the mechanism of the ubiquinol oxidizing site.Abbreviations (BChl)2 P870, primary donor of the photochemical reaction center - b/c 1 complex ubiquinol: cytochrome c 2 oxidoreductase - cyt b H cytochrome b-561 or higher potential cytochrome b - cyt b L cytochrome b-566, or low potential cytochrome b - cyt c 1, cyt c 2, cyt c t cytochromes c 1 and c 2, and total cytochrome c (cyt c 1 and cyt c 2) - Fe.S Rieske-type iron sulfur center, Q - QH2 ubiquinone, ubiquinol - Qz, QzH2, Qz ubiquinone, ubiquinol, and semiquinone anion of ubiquinone, bound at quinol oxidizing site - Qz-site ubiquinol oxidizing site (also called Qo-(outside) - Qo (Oxidizing) - QP (Positive proton potential) site) - Qc-site uubiquinone reductase site (also called the Qi-(inside) - QR (Reducing), or - QN (Negative proton potential) site) - UHDBT 5-(n-undecyl)-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazol  相似文献   

15.
Photosynthetic electron transfer has been examined in whole cells, isolated membranes and in partially purified reaction centers (RCs) of Roseicyclus mahoneyensis, strain ML6 and Porphyrobacter meromictius, strain ML31, two species of obligate aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria. Photochemical activity in strain ML31 was observed aerobically, but the photosynthetic apparatus was not functional under anaerobic conditions. In strain ML6 low levels of photochemistry were measured anaerobically, possibly due to incomplete reduction of the primary electron acceptor (QA) prior to light excitation, however, electron transfer occurred optimally under low oxygen conditions. Photoinduced electron transfer involves a soluble cytochrome c in both strains, and an additional reaction center (RC)-bound cytochrome c in ML6. The redox properties of the primary electron donor (P) and QA of ML31 are similar to those previously determined for other aerobic phototrophs, with midpoint redox potentials of +463 mV and −25 mV, respectively. Strain ML6 showed a very narrow range of ambient redox potentials appropriate for photosynthesis, with midpoint redox potentials of +415 mV for P and +94 mV for QA. Cytoplasm soluble and photosynthetic complex bound cytochromes were characterized in terms of apparent molecular mass. Fluorescence excitation spectra revealed that abundant carotenoids not intimately associated with the RC are not involved in photosynthetic energy conservation.  相似文献   

16.
John R. Bowyer  Antony R. Crofts 《BBA》1981,636(2):218-233
(1) Current models for the mechanism of cyclic electron transport in Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides and Rhodopseudomonas capsulata have been investigated by observing the kinetics of electron transport in the presence of inhibitors, or in photosynthetically incompetent mutant strains. (2) In addition to its well-characterized effect on the Rieske-type iron sulfur center, 5-(n-undecyl)-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole (UHDBT) inhibits both cytochrome b50 and cytochrome b?90 reduction induced by flash excitation in Rps. sphaeroides and Rps. capsulata. The concentration dependency of the inhibition in the presence of antimycin (approx. 2.7 mol UHDBT/mol reaction center for 50% inhibition of extent) is very similar to that of its inhibition of the antimycin-insensitive phase of ferricytochrome c re-reduction. UHDBT did not inhibit electron transfer between the reduced primary acceptor ubiquinone (Q?I) and the secondary acceptor ubiquinone (QII) of the reaction center acceptor complex. A mutant of Rps. capsulata, strain R126, lacked both the UHDBT and antimycin-sensitive phases of cytochrome c re-reduction, and ferricytochrome b50 reduction on flash excitation. (3) In the presence of antimycin, the initial rate of cytochrome b50 reduction increased about 10-fold as the Eh(7.0) was lowered below 180 mV. A plot of the rate at the fastest point in each trace against redox potential resembles the Nernst plot for a two-electron carrier with Em(7.0) ≈ 125 ± 15 mV. Following flash excitation there was a lag of 100–500 μs before cytochrome b50 reduction began. However, there was a considerably longer lag before significant reduction of cytochrome c by the antimycin-sensitive pathway occurred. (4) The herbicide ametryne inhibited electron transfer between Q?I and QII. It was an effective inhibitor of cytochrome b50 photoreduction at Eh(7.0) 390 mV, but not at Eh(7.0) 100 mV. At the latter Eh, low concentrations of ametryne inhibited turnover after one flash in only half of the photochemical reaction centers. By analogy with the response to o-phenanthroline, it is suggested that ametryne is ineffective at inhibiting electron transfer from Q?I to the secondary acceptor ubiquinone when the latter is reduced to the semiquinone form before excitation. (5) At Eh(7.0) > 200 mV, antimycin had a marked effect on the cytochrome b50 reduction-oxidation kinetics but not on the cytochrome c and reaction center changes or the slow phase III of the electrochromic carotenoid change on a 10-ms time scale. This observation appears to rule out a mechanism in which cytochrome b50 oxidation is obligatorily and kinetically linked to the antimycin-sensitive phase of cytochrome c reduction in a reaction involving transmembrane charge transfer at high Eh values. However, at lower redox potentials, cytochrome b50 oxidation is more rapid, and may be linked to the antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c. (6) It is concluded that neither a simple linear scheme nor a simple Q-cycle model can account adequately for all the observations. Future models will have to take account of a possible heterogeneity of redox chains resulting from the two-electron gate at the level of the secondary quinone, and of the involvement of cytochrome b?90 in the rapid reactions of the cyclic electron transfer chain  相似文献   

17.
A spontaneous mutant (R/89) of photosynthetic purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26 was selected for resistance to 200 M atrazin. It showed increased resistance to interquinone electron transfer inhibitors of o-phenanthroline (resistance factor, RF=20) in UQo reconstituted isolated reaction centers and terbutryne in reaction centers (RF=55) and in chromatophores (RF=85). The amino acid sequence of the QB binding protein of the photosynthetic reaction center (the L subunit) was determined by sequencing the corresponding pufL gene and a single mutation was found (IleL229 Met). The changed amino acid of the mutant strain is in van der Waals contact with the secondary quinone QB. The binding and redox properties of QB in the mutant were characterized by kinetic (charge recombination) and multiple turnover (cytochrome oxidation and semiquinone oscillation) assays of the reaction center. The free energy for stabilization of QAQB with respect to QA QB was GAB=–60 meV and 0 meV in reaction centers and GAB=–85 meV and –46 meV in chromatophores of R-26 and R/89 strains at pH 8, respectively. The dissociation constants of the quinone UQo and semiquinone UQo in reaction centers from R-26 and R/89 showed significant and different pH dependence. The observed changes in binding and redox properties of quinones are interpreted in terms of differential effects (electrostatics and mesomerism) of mutation on the oxidized and reduced states of QB.Abbreviations BChl bacteriochlorophyll - Ile isoleucine - Met methionin - P primary donor - QA primary quinone acceptor - QB secondary quinone acceptor - RC reaction center protein - UQo 2,3-dimethoxy-5-methyl benzoquinone - UQ10 ubiquinone 50 This work is dedicated to the memory of Randall Ross Stein (1954–1994) and is, in a small way, a testament to the impact which Randy's ideas have had on the development of the field of competitive herbicide binding.  相似文献   

18.
Ted Mar  Rafael Picorel  Gabriel Gingras 《BBA》1982,682(3):354-363
The aim of this work was to explain the relatively fast growth of a mutant of Rhodospirillum rubrum (F24.1) which contains 7–8% of an apparently normal photoreaction center. We explored the double hypothesis that the size of its photosynthetic unit is larger than that of the wild type and that its electron-transport chain is organized in a network rather than in isolated loops. The first feature would allow faster growth under less than saturating light intensities and the second would allow faster maximal electron fluxes than would be predicted from the photoreaction center content. With respect to the first possibility, measurements of absorbance changes at 793 nm induced by short flashes of increasing intensity indicate that the photosynthetic unit of strain F24.1 is 5.6-fold larger than that of strain S1. The second possibility was verified by measuring relative electron fluxes at the photoreaction center in the two strains. This was established in the steady state from the amount of primary donor oxidized by a continuous light beam of increasing intensity. This electron flux was found to be about 70% as high in strain F24.1 as in strain S1. A more detailed study of the electron-transport chain indicated that cytochrome c2 is by far the main secondary electron donor in strain F24.1. No evidence could be obtained for the existence of another secondary donor in that strain. The mole ratio of cytochrome c2 to photoreaction center is about 6 in strain F24.1 as conpared to about 0.5 in strain S1. In strain 24.1, the pool of secondary donor appears to be collectively involved in the reduction of the oxidized primary donor. The replacement time at the photoreaction center of a first equivalent of oxidized cytochrome c2 by a second equivalent of reduced cytochrome c2 is less than or equal to 0.2 ms. The effect of the photoreaction center content on the size of the photosynthetic unit is discussed in terms of the different models proposed for the organisation of the photosynthetic unit. We propose that the electron-transport chain is organized in a network, perhaps by virtue of the lateral mobility of some of the electron carriers such as ubiquinone and cytochrome c2.  相似文献   

19.
The orientation of pigments and pigment-protein complexes of the green photosynthetic bacterium Prosthecochloris aestuarii was studied by measurement of linear dichroism spectra at 295 and 100 K. Orientation of intact cells and membrane vesicles (Complex I) was obtained by drying on a glass plate. The photochemically active pigment-protein complexes (photosystem-protein complex and reaction center pigment-protein complex) and the antenna bacteriochlorophyll a protein were oriented by pressing a polyacrylamide gel. The data indicate that the near-infrared transitions (Qy) of bacteriochlorophyll c and most bacteriochlorophyll a molecules have a relatively parallel orientation to the membrane, whereas the Qy transitions of the bacteriochlorophyll a in the antenna protein are oriented predominantly perpendicularly to the membrane. Carotenoids and the Qx transitions (590–620 nm) of bacteriochlorophyll a, not belonging to the bacteriochlorophyll a protein, have a relatively perpendicular orientation to the membrane. The absorption and linear dichroism spectra indicate the existence of different pools of bacteriochlorophyll c in the chlorosomes and of carotenoid and bacteriopheophytin c in the cell membrane. The results suggest that the photosystem-protein and reaction center pigment-protein complexes are oriented with their short axes approximately perpendicular to the plane of the membrane. The symmetry axis of the bacteriochlorophyll a protein has an approximately perpendicular orientation.  相似文献   

20.
Three c-type cytochromes were purified from the filamentous sulfur-oxidizing bacterium, Beggiatoa alba strain B18LD, by ammonium sulfate fractionation, flat bed isoelectric focusing and gel filtration. Two of the cytochromes; flavocytochrome c-554 and cytochrome c, were similar to cytochromes found in anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria. Flavocytochrome c-554 had an apparent molecular weight of 21,000, an isoelectric focusing point at pH 4.4, contained FMN as the flavin component and had absorption maxima at 410, 450 and 470 nm in the oxidized form and at 417, 523 and 554 nm in the dithionite-reduced from. Cytochrome c was also an acidic protein with a pI of 4.8 and an apparent molecular weight of 18,000. The absorption spectra maxima were at 400, 490 and 635 nm in the oxidized form, at 424 and 550 nm in the dithione-reduced form and at 415 and 555 nm in the dithionite-reduced plus CO form. The third cytochrome characterized, cytochrome c-553 had an apparent molecular weight of 13,000, an isoelectric point at pH 4.4 and showed absorption maxima at 411 nm in the oxidized form and at 418, 523 and 553 nm in the dithionite-reduced form. Cytochrome c-553 was also isolated as a complex with a non-heme protein with a molecular weight of 16,000. The non-heme protein altered the absorption spectra and isoelectric point of cytochrome c-553.Abbreviations IEF isoelectric focusing - M r molecular weight - pI isoelectric point  相似文献   

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