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1.
In bacterial reaction centers (RCs), changes of protonation state of carboxylic groups, of quinone-protein interactions as well as backbone rearrangements occuring upon QB photoreduction can be revealed by FTIR difference spectroscopy. The influence of compensatory mutations to the detrimental Asp L213 Asn replacement on QB /QB FTIR spectra of Rb. sphaeroides RCs was studied in three double mutants carrying a Asn M44 Asp, Arg M233 Cys, or Arg H177 His suppressor mutation. The proton uptake by Glu L212 upon QB formation, as reflected by the positive band at 1728 cm–1, is increased in the Asn M44 Asp and Arg H177 His suppressor RCs with respect to native RCs, and remains comparable to that observed in Asp L213 Asn mutant RCs. Only the Arg M233 Cys suppressor mutation affected the 1728 cm–1 band, reducing its amplitude to near native level. Thus, there is no clear correlation between the apparent extent of proton uptake by Glu L212 and the recovery of the proton transfer RC function. In all of the mutant spectra, several protein (amide I and amide II) and quinone anion (C...O/C...C) modes are perturbed compared to the spectrum of native RCs. These IR data show that all of the compensatory mutations alter the semiquinone-protein interactions and the backbone providing direct evidence of structural changes accompanying the restoration of efficient proton transfer in RCs containing the Asp L213 Asn lesion.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Direct electrometry was used to study the light-induced voltage changes in the Rhodobacter sphaeroides chromatophores adsorbed to a phospholipid-impregnated nitrocellulose film. After the second laser flash, a fast increase in the voltage associated with charge separation was followed by a slower increase attributed to the proton uptake in the QB site of the photosynthetic reaction centers. Kinetics and relative amplitudes of these voltage changes attributed to the QA –. B –. QAQBH2 transition, were measured as a function of pH and temperature between +4 and +40 °C. The kinetics can be approximated by a single exponent above +23 °C (100 µs at +25 °C, pH 7.2), whereas below this temperature, it was a good fit of two exponential approximation (65 µs and 360 µs with similar contributions at +10 °C, pH 7.2). The faster component diminished with an apparent pK 8.5, whereas the slower one was maintained at a constant level until pH 9.5 and then decreased. The calculated activation energy from the temperature dependence of the slower component (55 – 65 kJ/mol) was much higher than that of the faster component (< 10 kJ/mol). The two voltage components can be attributed to the transfer of the first (faster component) and the second (slower component) proton from the reaction center surface to QB. We suggested that higher activation energy of the slower component was due to a conformational change in the reaction center kinetically coupled to the second proton transfer to QBH.The faster component diminished in the presence of 1 M KCl, with an apparent pK 7.5. To explain this observation, we assume that: (i) the midpoint potential of the QA/QA –. redox pair was higher in 1 M KCl because of the reduced surface potential of chromatophores; (ii) the midpoint potential of the QB –./QBH–. redox pair was insensitive to the surface potential change; (iii) the equilibrium constant of the reaction QA –.QB –. QAQBH decreased at high ionic strength.  相似文献   

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