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1.
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   

2.
(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   

3.
Spectrophotometric, kinetic, thermodynamic and stoichiometric properties of the low-potential b-type cytochrome of chromatophores from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides are reported. Cytochrome b-566 has a double α-band with maxima at 559 and 566 nm. Resolution of the spectrum by full-spectral redox potentiometry showed no indication that the two peaks represent more than one component. The component titrated with Em,7 ≈ ?80 ± 10 mV. By appropriate choice of wavelength pairs and by subtraction of the contribution due to other components, the kinetics of cytochrome b-566 absorbance changes following flash excitation have been resolved from those of other components. Time-resolved flash spectra corrected for the contributions of other components are consistent with the behavior of both peaks of the α-band as a single kinetic species. The kinetics of cytochrome b-566 in the presence of antimycin show that the reduction of this cytochrome occurred only if cytochrome b-561 was reduced before the flash, either chemically, by poising the ambient redox potential (Eh) below the Em of cytochrome b-561 (Em,7 ≈ 50 mV), or photochemically at higher redox potentials by a previous flash. The rate of reduction of cytochrome b-566 varied with Eh. At low Eh (approx. 0 mV) reduction on the first flash showed t12 ≈ 1.25 ms; at high Eh (approx. 180 mV) reduction on the second flash showed t12 ≈ 10 ms. In the absence of antimycin at Eh ≈ 0 mV, cytochrome b-566 was observed to become rapidly reduced (t12 ≈ 500 μs) and then reoxidized (t12 ≈ 2 ms) after a single flash. At higher redox potentials (Eh > 80 mV) no kinetic changes which could be unambiguously attributed to cytochrome b-566 were observed following a single flash. The results are interpreted in terms of a Q-cycle mechanism in which the reductant for cytochrome b-566 is the semiquinone formed on oxidation of ubiquinol from the quinone pool. The oxidation of the ubiquinol occurs by a concerted reaction in which one electron is accepted by the Rieske-type FeS center and the other by cytochrome b-566. We suggest that the kinetic characteristics may indicate a pathway for reduction of the b-type cytochromes in which cytochrome b-566 is the immediate electron acceptor and donates to cytochrome b-561 in a serial pathway. The experimental results in the presence of antimycin are compared with data from a computer simulation of the thermodynamic behavior of the chain, and the computer model is shown to provide an excellent fit.  相似文献   

4.
The carotenoid-less reaction centers isolated from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides (strain R 26) bind pure all-trans spheroidene as well as spheroidenone in a nearly 1:1 molar ratio with respect to P-870. Neither β-carotene nor spirilloxanthin, both absent from wild-type Rps. sphaeroides, could be bound in appreciable amounts. Resonance Raman spectra of the carotenoidreaction center complex indicate that the carotenoid is bound as a cis isomer, its conformation being very close, although probably not identical, to that assumed by the carotenoid in the wild-type reaction centers. The electronic absorption spectra of the carotenoid-reaction center complexes are in good agreement with such a interpretation. When bound to the R 26 reaction centers, spheroidene displays light-induced absorbance changes identical in peak wavelengths and comparable in amplitudes to those observed in the wild-type reaction centers. Thus the binding of the carotenoid to the R 26 reaction centers most likely occurs at the same proteic site as in the wild-type reaction centers. This site shows selectivity towards the nature of carotenoids, and has the same sterical requirement as in the wild type, leading to the observed all-trans to cis isomerisation.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
(1) Two populations of reaction centers in the chromatophore membrane can be distinguished under some conditions of initial redox poise (300 mV < Eh < 400 mV): those which transfer a reducing equivalent after the first flash from the secondary quinone (QII) of the reaction center to cytochrome b of the ubiquinone-cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase; and those which retain the reducing equivalent on Q?II until a second flash is given. These two populations do not exchange on a time scale of tens of seconds. (2) At redox potentials higher than 400 mV, Q?II generated after the first flash is no longer able to reduce cytochrome b-560 even in those reaction centers associated with an oxidoreductase. Under these conditions, doubly reduced QII generated by a second flash is required for cytochrome b reduction, so that the QII effectively functions as a two-electron gate into the oxidoreductase at these high potentials. (3) At redox potentials below 300 mV, although the two populations of QII are no longer distinguishable, cytochrome b reduction is still dependent on only part of the reaction center population. (4) Proton binding does not oscillate under any condition tested.  相似文献   

7.
(1) Three analogs of merocyanine dyes added to suspensions of chromatophore vesicles showed absorbance changes responding to the change in surface potential induced by salt addition and to the change in membrane potential induced by illumination. (2) The extent of the light-induced absorbance changes of the dyes was linearly related, in the presence and absence of uncouplers, to that of carotenoid spectral shift which is an intrinsic probe of the intramembrane electric field. (3) Comparison of the merocyanine absorbance changes induced by salt addition with those induced by illumination indicated that the surface potential change in the outer surface of chromatophore membranes during illumination was very small. (4) Judging from the spectra of these absorbance and from the low permeabilities of the dyes to membrane, the absorbance change are attributed to change in distribution of the dyes between the medium and the outer surface region in chromatophore membranes. The extent of the light-induced absorbance changes of merocyanine dyes depended on the salt concentration of the medium. The types of dependence were different among three merocyanine analogs. This is explained by the mechanism mentioned above assuming appropriate parameters. It is suggested that, under continuous illumination, an equilibrium of the electrochemical potential of H+ is reached between the bulk aqueous phase and the outer surface region in the membrane where the merocyanine dyes are distributed.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Hiroyuki Arata  Mitsuo Nishimura 《BBA》1983,725(2):394-401
Delayed fluorescence of chromatophores of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides was measured to estimate the standard free energy change accompanying the electron transfer from the bacteriochlorophyll dimer (P) to the primary acceptor quinone (QA). The chromatophores emitted delayed fluorescence with a lifetime of about 60 ms in the presence of o-phenanthroline. By comparing the intensity of the delayed fluorescence with that of the prompt fluorescence, the standard free energy of the P+QA? radical pair was evaluated. It was about 0.87 eV below the level of excited singlet state, P1QA, or 0.51 eV above the ground state, PQA, independent of pH.  相似文献   

10.
A capacitor microphone was used to measure the enthalpy and volume changes that accompany the electron transfer reactions, PQAhv P+Q?A and PQAQBhv P+QAQ?B, following flash excitation of photosynthetic reaction centers isolated from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. P is a bacteriochlorophyll dimer (P-870), and QA and QB are ubiquinones. In reaction centers containing only QA, the enthalpy of P+Q?A is very close to that of the PQA ground state (ΔHr = 0.05 ± 0.03 eV). The free energy of about 0.65 eV that is captured in the photochemical reaction evidently takes the form of a substantial entropy decrease. In contrast, the formation of P+QAQ?B in reaction centers containing both quinones has a ΔHr of 0.32 ± 0.02 eV. The entropy change must be near zero in this case. In the presence of o-phenanthroline, which blocks electron transfer between Q?A and QB, ΔHr for forming P+Q?AQB is 0.13 ± 0.03 eV. The influence of flash-induced proton uptake on the results was investigated, and the ΔHr values given above were measured under conditions that minimized this influence. Although the reductions of QA and QB involve very different changes in enthalpy and entropy, both reactions are accompanied by a similar volume decrease of about 20 ml/mol. The contraction probably reflects electrostriction caused by the charges on P+ and Q?A or Q?B.  相似文献   

11.
Marc Le Maire  Emilio Rivas 《BBA》1983,722(1):150-157
Solubilized reaction centers purified from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides (wild type and R26 strains) were studied in a nondenaturing detergent, dodecyldimethylamine N-oxide, by solution X-ray scattering. Some thermodynamic parameters were also obtained by coupling the results of this study with sedimentation equilibrium data previously obtained (Rivas, E., Reiss-Husson, F and le Maire, M. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 2943–2950). The particle weight of both types of reaction centers was found to be about 160 000 Da, corresponding to a protein molecular weight close to 90 000. Both hydrodynamic and solution X-ray scattering experiments suggest that the complexes have a globular shape, with a maximal chord of about 90 Å as indicated by the autocorrelation function. This maximal dimension is probably created by the binding of detergent to the solubilized complex. The approach followed in this study to investigate the shape of detergent-protein complexes involved a comparison of the Stokes' radii and the radii of gyration of various proteins.  相似文献   

12.
Two carotenoids, neurosporene and spheroidene, have been successfully added to chromatophores from the carotenoidless mutant of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides R26. Carotenoids reconstituted in this way into the B-850 light-harvesting pigment-protein complex both sensitise bacteriochlorophyll fluorescence and protect the complex from the photodynamic reaction.  相似文献   

13.
John D. Bolt  Kenneth Sauer 《BBA》1981,637(2):342-347
The light-harvesting bacteriochlorophyll-protein (BChl-protein) from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, R-26 mutant, exhibits a strong optical absorption peak near 850 nm (Qy band) and a weaker peak at 590 nm (Qx band). This pigment-protein appears to contain two BChl molecules per subunit, and previous circular dichroism studies indicated the presence of excitonic interactions between the BChl molecules. The complex exhibits a fluorescence maximum near 870 nm at room temperature. Excitation in the Qy region results in polarization p values that vary only from +0.12 at 820 nm to +0.14 near 900 nm. These values are appreciably smaller than that for monomeric BChl in viscous solvents (p > 0.4). By contrast, using Qx excitation the p value is ?0.25 for the BChl-protein complex, which is close to that observed for the BChl monomer. For the BChl-protein these polarization values do not change greatly at a temperature of 90 K; however, the Stokes' shift of the fluorescence emission increases significantly over that at room temperature.  相似文献   

14.
H.J. Den Blanken  A.J. Hoff 《BBA》1982,681(3):365-374
We have recorded triplet optical absorption-difference spectra of the reaction center triplet state of isolated reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides R-26 and Rps. viridis with optical absorption-detected electron spin resonance in zero magnetic field (ADMR) at 1.2 K. This technique is one to two orders of magnitude more sensitive than conventional flash absorption spectroscopy, and consequently allows a much higher spectral resolution. Besides the relatively broad bleachings and appearances found previously (see, e.g., Shuvalov V.A. and Parson W.W. (1981) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 638, 50–59) we have found strong, sharp oscillations in the wavelength regions 790–830 nm (Rps. sphaeroides) and 810–890 nm (Rps. viridis). For Rps. viridis these features are resolved into two band shifts (a blue shift at about 830 nm and a red shift at about 855 nm) and a strong, narrow absorption band at 838 nm. For Rps. sphaeroides R-26 the features are resolved into a red shift at about 810 nm and a strong absorption band at 807 nm. We conclude that the appearance of the absorption bands at 807 and 838 nm, respectively, is due to monomeric bacteriochlorophyll. Apparently, the exciton interaction between the pigments constituting the primary donor is much weaker in the triplet state than in the singlet state, and at low temperature the triplet is localized on one of the bacteriochlorophylls on an optical time scale. The fact that for Rps. sphaeroides the strong band shift and the monomeric band found at 1.2 K are absent at 293 K and very weak at 77 K indicates that these features are strongly temperature dependent. It seems, therefore, premature to ascribe the temperature dependence between 293 and 77 K of the intensity of the triplet absorption-difference spectrum at 810 nm (solely) to a delocalization of the triplet state on one of the accessory bacteriochlorophyll pigments.  相似文献   

15.
The primary electron transfer processes in isolated reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides have been investigated with subpicosecond and picosecond spectroscopic techniques. Spectra and kinetics of the absorbance changes following excitation with 0.7-ps 610-nm pulses, absorbed predominantly by bacteriochlorophyll (BChl), indicate that the radical pair state P+BPh?, in which an electron has been transferred from the BChl dimer (P) to a bacteriopheophytin (BPh), is formed with a time constant no greater than 4 ps. The initial absorbance changes also reveal an earlier state, which could be an excited singlet state, or a P+BChl? radical pair.The bleaching at 870 nm produced by 7 ps excitation pulses at 530 nm (absorbed by BPh) or at 600 nm (absorbed predominantly by BChl) shows no resolvable delay with respect to standard compounds in solution, suggesting that the time for energy transfer from BPh to P is less than 7 ps. However, the bleaching in the BPh band at 545 nm following 7-ps 600-nm excitation, exhibits an 8- to 10-ps lag with respect to standard compounds. This finding is qualitatively similar to the 35-ps delay previously observed at 760 nm by Shuvalov at al. (Shuvalov, V.A., Klevanik, A.V., Sharkov, A.V., Matveetz, Y.A. and Kryukov, P.G. (1978) FEBS Lett. 91, 135–139) when 25-ps 880-nm excitation flashes were used. A delay in the bleaching approximately equal to the width of the excitation flash can be explained in terms of the opposing effects of bleaching due to the reduction of BPh, and absorbance increases due to short-lived excited states (probably of BChl) that turn over rapidly during the flash.The decay of the initial bleaching at 800 nm produced by 7-ps 530- or 600-nm excitation flashes shows a fast component with a 30-ps time constant, in addition to a slower component having the 200-ps kinetics expected for the decay of P+BPh?. The dependence on excitation intensity of the absorbance changes due to the 30-ps component indicate that the quantum yield of the state responsible for this step is lower than that observed for the primary electron transfer reactions. This suggests that at least part of the transient bleaching at 800 nm is due to a secondary process, possibly caused by excitation with an excessive number of photons. If the 800-nm absorbing BChl (B) acts as an intermediate electron carrier in the primary photochemical reaction, electron transfer between B and the BPh must have a time constant no greater than 4 ps.  相似文献   

16.
Changes in the surface potential, the electrical potential difference between the membrane surface and the bulk aqueous phase were measured with the carotenoid spectral shift which indicates the change of electrical field in the membrane. Chromatophores were prepared from a non-sulfur purple bacterium, Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, in a low-salt buffer. Surface potential was changed by addition of salt or by pH jump as predicted by the Gouy-Chapman diffuse double layer theory.When a salt was added at neutral pH, the shift of carotenoid spectrum to shorter wavelength, corresponding to an increase in electrical potential at the outside surface, was observed. The salts of divalent cations (MgSO4, MgCl2, CaCl2) were effective at concentrations lower than those of monovalent cation salts (NaCl, KCl, Na2SO4) by a factor of about 50. Among the salts of monoor divalent cation used, little ionic species-dependent difference was observed in the low-concentration range except that due to the valence of cations. The pH dependence of the salt-induced carotenoid change was explained in terms of the change in surface charge density, which was about 0 at pH 5–5.5 and had negative values at higher pH values. The dependence of the pH jump-induced absorbance change on the salt concentration was also consistent with the change in the charge density. The surface potential change by the salt addition, which was calibrated by H+ diffusion potential, was about 90 mV at the maximum. From the difference between the effective concentrations with salts of mono- and divalent cations at pH 7.8, the surface charge density of (?1.9 ± 0.5) · 10?3 elementary charge per Å2, and the surface potential of about ?100 mV in the presence of about 0.1 mM divalent cation or 5 mM monovalent cation were calculated.  相似文献   

17.
Aqueous mixtures of reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides and gelatin were dried to form thin films. Following hydration, these films were stretched as much as two to three times their original length. Polarized absorption spectra showing linear dichroism were obtained for both unstretched and stretched films, with the planes and stretching axes of the films mounted in various geometries relative to the electric vector of the measuring beam. These data were analyzed in terms of the following model: Reaction centers possess an axis of symmetry that is fixed in relation to the reaction center structure. In unstretched films this axis is confined to the film plane and oriented at random within the plane. In stretched films the symmetry axis is aligned with the direction of stretching. In both preparations reaction centers are distributed randomly with respect to rotation about the axis of symmetry. The data are consistent with this model when the analysis acknowledges less than perfect orientation. For perfect orientation in a stretched film the model predicts uniaxial symmetry about the axis of stretching. The approach to this condition was examined with films stretched to different extents. Extrapolation yielded dichroic ratios for the ideal case of perfect orientation, and allowed calculation of the angles between the axis of symmetry and the various optical transition dipoles in the reaction center. This treatment included the two absorption bands of the bacteriochlorophyll ‘special pair’ (photochemical electron donor) in the Qx region, at 600 and 630 nm, which we were able to resolve in light minus dark difference spectra.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
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   

20.
13C-nuclear magnetic resonance was used to study the metabolism of [2-13C]acetate in suspensions of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. In the dark, in logarithmic-phase cells the 13C label appeared first in butyrate C-2 and C-4 and subsequently in glutamate C-4 and succinate C-2 and C-3. In the light, synthesis of poly(β-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) takes place. Butyrate synthesis seems to be independent of PHB synthesis or degradation activity. Starved, logarithmic-phase cells also show massive synthesis of PHB in the dark. Stationary-phase cells incorporate 13C predominantly into glutamate and succinate. No significant butyrate biosynthesis can be detected in the dark or during illumination. The incorporation of label in PHB is very slow in these cells and most probably originates from exchange of 12C for 13C into PHB. This might indicate slow turnover without net synthesis of the polymer occurring under these conditions. The results are discussed in relation to the redox state and the availability of metabolic energy for biosynthetic reactions in the dark and during illumination of cell suspensions of Rps. sphaeroides.  相似文献   

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