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1.
《BBA》1985,810(1):33-48
We have examined the temperature dependence of the rate of electron transfer to ubiquinone from the bacteriopheophytin (BPh) that serves as an initial electron acceptor (I) in reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. The kinetics were measured from the decay of the 665-nm absorption band of the reduced BPh (BPh or I) and from the recovery of the BPh band at 545 nm, following excitation of reaction centers in polyvinyl alcohol films with 30-ps flashes. The measured time constant decreases from 229 ± 25 ps at 295 K to 97 ± 8 ps near 100 K and then remains constant down to 5 K. The temperature dependence of the kinetics can be rationalized on the assumption that the reaction results in changes in the frequencies of numerous low-energy nuclear (vibrational) modes of the electron carriers and/or the protein. The kinetics measured in the absorption bands near 765 and 795 nm show essentially the same temperature dependence as those measured at 545 or 665 nm, but the time constants vary with detection wavelength. The time constant measured in the 795-nm region (70 ± 10 ps at 5 and 76 K) is shorter than that seen in the absorption bands of the BPh; the time constant measured at 758 nm is longer. Time constants measured with reaction centers in solution at 288 K also vary with the detection wavelength. These results can be explained on the assumption that the absorption changes measured at some wavelengths reflect nuclear relaxations rather than electron transfer. The absorption changes at 795 nm probably reflect a relaxation of the bacteriochlorophyll molecules that are near neighbors of the BPh and the primary electron donor (P). Those near 530 and 755 nm probably are due to the second BPh molecule, which does not appear to undergo oxidation or reduction.  相似文献   

2.
Henk Vasmel  Jan Amesz  Arnold J. Hoff 《BBA》1986,852(2-3):159-168
The optical properties of the reaction center of the filamentous green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus, that contains three bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a and three bacteriopheophytin (BPh) a molecules, were analyzed in the near-infrared region with the aid of exciton theory. The coordinates obtained from the X-ray analysis of the reaction center of Rhodopseudomonas viridis (Deisenhofer, J., Epp, O., Miki, K., Huber, R. and Michel, H. (1984) J. Mol. Biol. 180, 385–398) were used for the geometry of the reaction center of C. aurantiacus, with the replacement of one of the ‘accessory’ BChl molecules by BPh. The results were found to be in good agreement with experimental low-temperature absorption spectra, linear and circular dichroism and fluorescence polarization spectra and lead to the following conclusions. The allowed, low-energy exciton transition of the primary electron donor (P-865) is located at 887 nm and carries the dipole strength of approx. two BChl a monomers; the high-energy exciton transition, around 790 nm, is mixed with wave functions of other pigments, which explains its relatively small angle with respect to the 887 nm transition. The optical transition of the accessory BChl a molecule near 812 nm has some contribution of the BChls that constitute P-865. This can account for the experimentally observed reorientation and shift of this transition upon oxidation of P-865. Two of the BPh molecules are located on the same (probably the M) polypeptide subunit and show a clear splitting of absorption bands (11 nm) due to exciton coupling; the single BPh on the opposite branch shows hardly any exciton shift. Similar calculations for reaction centers of purple bacteria that contain four BChl a and two BPh a molecules resulted in a very low dipole strength for the high-energy transition of the primary donor due to antisymmetric mixing with both accessory BChl a wave functions and gave very little splitting of the absorption bands of BPh a. Our results indicate that the arrangement of the chromophores in reaction centers of C. aurantiacus is very similar to that in purple bacteria. The functional L-chains of the reaction centers of purple and filamentous green bacteria consist of pigments of the same type in a probably very similar arrangement.  相似文献   

3.
We have investigated the primary photochemistry of two symmetry-related mutants of Rhodobacter sphaeroides in which the histidine residues associated with the central Mg2+ ions of the two bacteriochlorophylls of the dimeric primary electron donor (His-L173 and His-M202) have been changed to leucine, affording bacteriochlorophyll (BChl)/bacteriopheophytin (BPh) heterodimers. Reaction centers (RCs) from the two mutants, (L)H173L and (M)H202L, have remarkably similar spectral and kinetic properties, although they are quite different from those of wild-type RCs. In both mutants, as in wild-type RCs, electron transfer to BPhL and not to BPhM is observed. These results suggest that asymmetry in the charge distribution of the excited BChl dimer (P*) in wild-type RCs (due to differing contributions of the two opposing intradimer charge-transfer states) contributes only modestly to the directionality of electron transfer. The results also suggest that differential orbital overlap of the two BChls of P with the chromophores on the L and M polypeptides does not contribute substantially to preferential electron transfer to BPhL.  相似文献   

4.
The tetrapyrrole electron donors and acceptors (bacteriochlorophyll, BCh; bacteriopheophytin, BPh) within the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center (RC) are arranged with a specific geometry that permits rapid (picosecond time scale) electron tunneling to occur between them. Here we have measured the angle between the molecular planes of the bacteriochlorophyll dimer (primary donor), B2, and the acceptor bacteriopheophytin, H, by analyzing the dichroism of the absorption change associated with H reduction, formed by photoselection with RCs of Rhodopseudomonas viridis. This angle between molecular planes is found to be 60° ± 2. This means that the ultrafast electron tunneling must occur between donors and acceptors that are fixed by the protein to have a noncoplanar alignment. Nearly perpendicular alignments have been determined for other electron tunneling complexes involving RCs. These geometries can be contrasted with models proposed for heme-heme electron transfer complexes, which have emphasized that mutually parallel orientations should permit the most kinetically facile transfers.  相似文献   

5.
《BBA》1986,850(2):275-285
We have examined the room temperature kinetics of the absorption changes associated with the formation of state P+I (P+BPh) and its subsequent decay to state P+QA in reaction centers from Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Our data, acquired using 30-ps excitation flashes, strongly suggest that formation of P+I (P+BPh) takes longer in Chloroflexus than in reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. The reduction of the photoactive bacteriopheophytin (BPh) could take as long as 13 ps. Absorption changes different from those due to P+I are observed early in the excitation flash, but the detailed identity of the transient remains unclear. We also find that the kinetics observed subsequent to P+I formation differ with detection wavelength. The time constant measured in the anion band (I) at 655 nm is 324 ± 20 ps and probably reflects the rate of electron transfer from I (BPh) to QA. However, the kinetics measured in the BPh ground-state absorption bands are slightly longer: 365 ± 19 and 367 ± 21 ps at 538 and 760 nm, respectively. At 810 nm, a wavelength normally associated with the monomeric bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) in the Chloroflexus reaction center, a slightly faster (281 ± 19 ps) time constant is observed. This detection-wavelength dependence of the kinetics is similar to that observed recently in Rps. sphaeroides reaction centers. Comparison of these results suggests that the kinetics observed in the ground-state absorption bands of the BPhs and BChls in Chloroflexus may contain contributions from readjustments of the pigments and/or protein in response to the charge separation process.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics and thermodynamics of the photochemical reactions of the purified reaction center (RC)-cytochrome (Cyt) complex from the chlorosome-lacking, filamentous anoxygenic phototroph, Roseiflexus castenholzii are presented. The RC consists of L- and M-polypeptides containing three bacteriochlorophyll (BChl), three bacteriopheophytin (BPh) and two quinones (Q(A) and Q(B)), and the Cyt is a tetraheme subunit. Two of the BChls form a dimer P that is the primary electron donor. At 285K, the lifetimes of the excited singlet state, P*, and the charge-separated state P(+)H(A)(-) (where H(A) is the photoactive BPh) were found to be 3.2±0.3 ps and 200±20 ps, respectively. Overall charge separation P*→→ P(+)Q(A)(-) occurred with ≥90% yield at 285K. At 77K, the P* lifetime was somewhat shorter and the P(+)H(A)(-) lifetime was essentially unchanged. Poteniometric titrations gave a P(865)/P(865)(+) midpoint potential of +390mV vs. SHE. For the tetraheme Cyt two distinct midpoint potentials of +85 and +265mV were measured, likely reflecting a pair of low-potential hemes and a pair of high-potential hemes, respectively. The time course of electron transfer from reduced Cyt to P(+) suggests an arrangement where the highest potential heme is not located immediately adjacent to P. Comparisons of these and other properties of isolated Roseiflexus castenholzii RCs to those from its close relative Chloroflexus aurantiacus and to RCs from the purple bacteria are made.  相似文献   

7.
Optical and structural properties of the B875 light-harvesting complex of purple bacteria were examined by measurements of low-temperature circular dichroism (CD) and excitation spectra of fluorescence polarization. In the B875 complex isolated from wild-type Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, fluorescence polarization increased steeply across the long-wavelength Qy bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl) absorption band at both 4 and approx. 300 K. With the native complex in the photosynthetic membranes of Rhodospirillum rubrum and Rps. sphaeroides wild-type and R26-carotenoidless strains, this significant increase in polarization from 0.12 to 0.40 was only observed at low temperature. A polarization of ?0.2 was observed upon excitation in the Qx BChl band. The results indicate that about 15% of the BChl molecules in the complex absorb at wavelengths about 12 nm longer than the other BChls. All BChls have approximately the same orientation with their Qy transition dipoles essentially parallel and their Qx transitions perpendicular to the plane of the membrane. At low temperature, energy transfer to the long-wavelength BChls is irreversible, yielding a high degree of polarization upon direct excitation, whereas at room temperature a partial depolarization of fluorescence by energy transfer between different subunits occurs in the membrane, but not in the isolated complex. CD spectra appear to reflect the two spectral forms of B875 BChl in Rps. sphaeroides membranes. They also reveal structural differences between the complexes of Rps. sphaeroides and Rhs. rubrum, in both BChl and carotenoid regions. The CD spectrum of isolated B875 indicates that the interactions between the BChls but not the carotenoids are altered upon isolation.  相似文献   

8.
A technique is described for the preparation of oriented samples from spinach chloroplasts whose linear dichroism is then studied by (flash) absorption spectroscopy. The chloroplasts are suspended in a glycerol-containing medium, oriented in a magnetic field, and slowly cooled in the magnet until the medium is rigid enough to avoid disorientation effects. The absorption spectra in polarized light have been measured at ?50° and ?170°C. They allow the orientation of chlorophyll b to be resolved, and the red transition moment is found to be tilted out of the membrane plane. A study of the flash-induced absorption changes linked to Photosystem-1 activity reveals a progressive evolution of the difference spectra and of the linear dichroism with decreasing temperatures. At ?170°C, the difference spectrum of P700 in the red is well resolved. All transition moments are found to be largely parallel to the membrane plane. The potential use of the technique for other experiments by differential absorption spectroscopy and by EPR techniques is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
C Kirmaier  D Weems  D Holten 《Biochemistry》1999,38(35):11516-11530
We report the primary charge separation events in a series of Rhodobacter capsulatus reaction centers (RCs) that have been genetically modified to contain a lysine near the bacteriochlorophyll molecule, BChl(M), on the nonphotoactive M-side of the RC. Using wild type and previously constructed mutants as templates, we substituted Lys for the native Ser residue at position 178 on the L polypeptide to make the S(L178)K single mutant, the S(L178)K/G(M201)D and S(L178)K/L(M212)H double mutants, and the S(L178)K/G(M201)D/L(M212)H triple mutant. In the triple mutant, the decay of the photoexcited primary electron donor (P) occurs with a time constant of 15 ps and is accompanied by 15% return to the ground state, 62% electron transfer to the L-side bacteriopheophytin, BPh(L), and 23% electron transfer to the M-side analogue, BPh(M). The data supporting electron transfer to the M-side include bleaching of the Q(X) band of BPh(M) at 528 nm and a spectrally and kinetically resolved anion band with a maximum at 640 nm assigned to BPh(M)(-). The decay of these features and concomitant approximately 20% decay of bleaching of the 850 nm band of P give a P(+)BPh(M)(-) lifetime on the order of 1-2 ns that reflects deactivation to give the ground state. These data and additional findings are compared to those from parallel experiments on the G(M201)D/L(M212)H double mutant, in which 15% electron transfer to BPh(M) has been reported previously and is reproduced here. We also compare the above results with the primary electron-transfer processes in S(L178)K, S(L178)K/G(M201)D, and S(L178)K /L(M212)H RCs and with those for the L(M212)H and G(M201)D single mutants and wild-type RCs. The comparison of extensive results that track the primary events in these eight RCs helps to elucidate key factors underlying the directionality and high yield of charge separation in the bacterial photosynthetic RC.  相似文献   

11.
The absorption (OD) and circular dichroism (CD) spectra of LH2 complexes from various purple bacteria have been measured and modeled. Based on the lineshapes of the spectra we can sort the LH2 complexes into two distinguishable groups: "acidophila"-like (type 1) and "molischianum"-like (type 2). Starting from the known geometric structures of Rhodopseudomonas (Rps.) acidophila and Rhodospirillum (Rsp.) molischianum we can model the OD and CD spectra of all species by just slightly varying some key parameters: the interaction strength, the energy difference of alpha- and beta-bound B850 bacteriochlorophylls (BChls), the orientation of the B800 and B850 BChls, and the (in)homogeneous broadening. Although the ring size can vary, the data are consistent with all the LH2 complexes having basically very similar structures.  相似文献   

12.
Qy-excitation resonance Raman (RR) spectra are reported for reaction centers (RCs) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1. The RR spectra were acquired for both chemically reduced and oxidized RCs at 25 and 201 K by using a variety of excitation wavelengths in the range 800-920 nm. This range spans the Qy absorption bands of the special pair (P) and the accessory bacteriochlorophylls (BChls). The RR studies indicate that both P and the accessory BChls exhibit rich RR spectra in the 30-1800-cm-1 region. For both types of pigments, at least 20 bands are observed in the 30-750-cm-1 range. Although the frequencies of the modes of P and the accessory BChls are different, it is possible to make one-to-one correlations of the bands observed for the two types of pigments. This result suggests that the vibronically active low-frequency modes of P are derived from monomer-like vibrations (although they may be coupled monomer-like modes) rather than being vibrations resulting from the additional degrees of freedom present in the dimer. A plausible set of vibrational assignments for the low-frequency modes of both P and the accessory BChls is proposed on the basis of a semiempirical normal coordinate calculation. Comparison of the RR intensities of the low-frequency modes of P with those of the analogous modes of the accessory BChls indicates that the intensities of the modes of the former pigments are considerably larger than those of the latter. Collectively, the spectral data indicate that a large number of low-frequency modes of P are strongly coupled to the Qy electronic transition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Picosecond photodichroism (photoselection) measurements have been carried out on reaction centers from the facultative green photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus using weak 30 ps flashes in the long-wavelength band of the primary electron donor, P. Absorption changes due to the chemical and photochemical oxidation of P and the reduction of quinone also have been examined. Our results on Chloroflexus suggest that the Qy transition-dipoles of the bacteriopheophytin molecules participating in, or affected by, the primary reactions are oriented essentially perpendicular to the 865 nm transition dipole of P. This is in agreement with previous work on reaction centers from purple bacteria, such as Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. The data also suggest that the 812 nm ground-state transition is oriented at an angle of 45–65° with respect to the 865 nm transition. The new band that appears near 800 nm upon oxidation of P is polarized mainly parallel to the 865 nm band. These relative polarizations of the absorption bands are in very good agreement with the results of recent linear dichroism studies (Vasmel, H., Meiburg, R.F., Kramer, H.J.M., De Vos, L.J. and Amesz, J. (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 724, 333–339). Possible origins for the absorption changes and the photodichroism spectra are discussed. The data are consistent with either a monomeric or dimeric structure of P-865.  相似文献   

14.
The discovery by Louis N. M. Duysens in the 1950s that illumination of photosynthetic purple bacteria can cause oxidation of either a bacteriochlorophyll complex (P) or a cytochrome was followed by an extended period of uncertainty as to which of these processes was the `primary' photochemical reaction. Similar questions arose later about the roles of bacteriopheophytin (BPh) and quinones as the initial electron acceptor. This is a personal account of kinetic measurements that showed that electron transfer from P to BPh occurs in the initial step, and that the oxidized bacteriochlorophyll complex (P+) then oxidizes the cytochrome while the reduced BPh transfers an electron to a quinone. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

15.
Oligomers of bacteriopheophytin (BPh) and bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) were formed in mixed aqueous-organic solvent systems, and in aqueous micelles of the detergent lauryldimethylamine oxide (LDAO). Conditions were found that gave relatively homogeneous samples of oligomers and that allowed quantitative comparisons of the spectroscopic properties of the monomeric and oligomeric pigments. The formation of certain types of oligomers is accompanied by a large bathochromic shift of the long-wavelength (Qy) absorption band of the BChl or BPh, and by a substantial increase in its dipole strength (hyperchromism). The hyperchromism of the Qy band occurs at the expense of the Soret band, which loses dipole strength. The Qx band shifts slightly to shorter wavelengths and also loses dipole strength. The CD spectrum in the near-infra-red (Qy) region becomes markedly nonconservative. (The net rotational strength in the Qy region is positive.) This also occurs at the expense of the bands at shorter wavelengths, which gain a net negative rotational strength. The spectroscopic properties of the oligomers resemble those of some of the BChl-protein complexes found in photosynthetic bacteria. The oligomerization of BPh in LDAO micelles is linked to the formation of large, cylindrical micelles that contain on the order of 105 LDAO molecules. However, the spectral changes probably occur on the formation of small oligomers of BPh; they begin to be seen when the micelles contain about 10 molecules of BPh. The BPh oligomers formed in LDAO micelles fluoresce at 865 nm, but the fluorescence yield is decreased about 40-fold, relative to that of monomeric BPh. The fluorescence yield is insensitive to the BPh/LDAO molar ratio, suggesting that the oligomers formed under these conditions are predominantly dimers. When the oligomers are excited with a short flash of light, they are converted with a low quantum yield into a metastable form. This transformation probably involves alterations in the geometry of the oligomer, but not full dissociation.  相似文献   

16.
The photochemically trapped bacteriopheophytin (BPh) b radical anion in the active branch (phi(*-)A) of reaction centers (RCs) from Blastochloris (formerly called Rhodopseudomonas) viridis is characterized by 1H-ENDOR as well as optical absorption spectroscopy. The two site-directed mutants YF(M208) and YL(M208), in which tyrosine at position M208 is replaced by phenylalanine and leucine, respectively, are investigated and compared with the wild type. The residue at M208 is in close proximity to the primary electron donor, P, the monomeric bacteriochlorophyll (BCh1), B(A), and the BPh, phiA, that are involved in the transmembrane electron transfer to the quinone, Q(A), in the RC. The analysis of the ENDOR spectra of (phi(*-)A at 160 K indicates that two distinct states of phi(*-)A are present in the wild type and the mutant YF(M208). Based on a comparison with phi(*-)A in RCs of Rhodobacter sphaeroides the two states are interpreted as torsional isomers of the 3-acetyl group of phiA. Only one phi(*-)A state occurs in the mutant YL(M208). This effect of the leucine residue at position M208 is explained by steric hindrance that locks the acetyl group in one specific position. On the basis of these results, an interpretation of the optical absorption difference spectrum of the state phi(*-)AQ(*-)A is attempted. This state can be accumulated at 100 K and undergoes an irreversible change between 100 and 200 K [Tiede et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 892 (1987) 294-302]. The corresponding absorbance changes in the BCh1 Q(x) and Q(y) regions observed in the wild type also occur in the YF(M208) mutant but not in YL(M208). The observed changes in the wild type and YF(M208) are assigned to RCs in which the 3-acetyl group of phiA changes its orientation. It is concluded that this distinct structural relaxation of phiA can significantly affect the optical properties of B(A) and contribute to the light-induced absorption difference spectra.  相似文献   

17.
Whole cells and isolated chlorosomes (antenna complex) of the green photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus have been studied by absorption spectroscopy (77 K and room temperature), fluorescence spectroscopy, circular dichroism, linear dichroism and electron spin resonance spectroscopy. The chlorosome absorption spectrum has maxima at 450 (contributed by carotenoids and bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a Soret), 742 (BChl c) and 792 nm (BChl a) with intensity ratios of 20:25. The fluorescence emission spectrum has peaks at 748 and 802 nm when excitation is into either the 742 or 450 nm absorption bands, respectively. Whole cells have fluorescence peaks identical to those in chlorosomes with the addition of a major peak observed at 867 nm. The CD spectrum of isolated chlorosomes has an asymmetric-derivative-shaped CD centered at 739 nm suggestive of exciton interaction at least on the level of dimers. Linear dichroism of oriented chlorosomes shows preferential absorption at 742 nm of light polarized parallel to the long axis of the chlorosome. This implies that the transition dipoles are also oriented more or less parallel to the long axis of the chlorosome. Treatment with ferricyanide results in the appearance of a 2.3 G wide ESR spectrum at g 2.002. Whole cells grown under different light conditions exhibit different fluorescence behavior when absorption is normalized at 742 nm. Cells grown under low light conditions have higher fluorescence intensity at 748 nm and lower intensity at 802 nm than cells grown under high light conditions. These results indicate that the BChl c in chlorosomes is highly organized, and transfers energy from BChl c (742 nm) to a connector of baseplate BChl B792 (BChl a) presumably located in the chlorosome baseplate adjacent to the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Reaction centers (RCs) of purple bacteria are uniquely suited objects to study the mechanisms of the photosynthetic conversion of light energy into chemical energy. A recently introduced method of higher order derivative spectroscopy [I.K. Mikhailyuk, H. Lokstein, A.P. Razjivin, A method of spectral subband decomposition by simultaneous fitting the initial spectrum and a set of its derivatives, J. Biochem. Biophys. Methods 63 (2005) 10-23] was used to analyze the NIR absorption spectra of RC preparations from Rhodobacter (R.) sphaeroides strain 2R and Blastochloris (B.) viridis strain KH, containing bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a and b, respectively. Q(y) bands of individual RC porphyrin components (BChls and bacteriopheophytins, BPheo) were identified. The results indicate that the upper exciton level P(y+) of the photo-active BChl dimer in RCs of R. sphaeroides has an absorption maximum of 810nm. The blue shift of a complex integral band at approximately 800nm upon oxidation of the RC is caused primarily by bleaching of P(y+), rather than by an electrochromic shift of the absorption band(s) of the monomeric BChls. Likewise, the disappearance of a band peaking at 842nm upon oxidation of RCs from B. viridis indicates that this band has to be assigned to P(y+). A blue shift of an absorption band at approximately 830nm upon oxidation of RCs of B. viridis is also essentially caused by the disappearance of P(y+), rather than by an electrochromic shift of the absorption bands of monomeric BChls. Absorption maxima of the monomeric BChls, B(B) and B(A) are at 802 and 797nm, respectively, in RCs of R. sphaeroides at room temperature. BPheo co-factors H(B) and H(A) peak at 748 and 758nm, respectively, at room temperature. For B. viridis RCs the spectral positions of H(B) and H(A) were found to be 796 and 816nm, respectively, at room temperature.  相似文献   

19.
Photosynthetically active reaction centre core (RCC) complexes were isolated from two species of green sulfur bacteria, Prosthecochloris (Ptc.) aestuarii strain 2K and Chlorobium (Chl.) tepidum, using the same isolation procedure. Both complexes contained the main reaction centre protein PscA and the iron–sulfur protein PscB, but were devoid of Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) protein. The Chl. tepidum RCC preparation contained in addition PscC (cytochrome c). In order to allow accurate determination of the pigment content of the RCC complexes, the extinction coefficients of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a in several solvents were redetermined with high precision. They varied between 54.8 mM−1 cm−1 for methanol and 97.0 mM−1 cm−1 for diethylether in the QY maximum. Both preparations appeared to contain 16 BChls a of which two are probably the 132-epimers, 4 chlorophylls (Chls) a 670 and 2 carotenoids per RCC. The latter were of at least two different types. Quinones were virtually absent. The absorption spectra were similar for the two species, but not identical. Eight bands were present at 6 K in the BChl a QY region, with positions varying from 777 to 837 nm. The linear dichroism spectra showed that the orientation of the BChl a QY transitions is roughly parallel to the membrane plane; most nearly parallel were transitions at 800 and 806 nm. For both species, the circular dichroism spectra were dominated by a strong band at 807–809 nm, indicating strong interactions between at least some of the BChls. The absorption, CD and LD spectra of the four Chls a 670 were virtually identical for both RCC complexes, indicating that their binding sites are highly conserved and that they are an essential part of the RCC complexes, possibly as components of the electron transfer chain. Low temperature absorption spectroscopy indicated that typical FMO–RCC complexes of Ptc. aestuarii and Chl. tepidum contain two FMO trimers per reaction centre. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
New and rapid procedures were developed for the isolation of chlorosomes and FMO-protein from the green sulfur bacteria Prosthecochloris (P.) aestuarii, Chlorobium (Cb.) phaeovibrioides, Cb. tepidum and Cb. vibrioforme. The resulting preparations were free from contaminating pigments and proteins as was shown by absorption spectroscopy, pigment analysis and SDS-PAGE. Two spectrally different types of FMO-protein were found. The first type, present in P. aestuarii and Cb. vibrioforme, has a main absorption band at 6 K at 815 nm, whereas the second type, isolated from Cb. tepidum and Cb. phaeovibrioides, has a strong band at 806 nm. In contrast to what was recently suggested (Tronrud DE and Matthews BW (1993) In: Deisenhofer J and Norris J (eds) The Photosynthetic Reaction Center, Vol 1, pp 13–21. Academic Press, San Diego, CA) the FMO-proteins contained no polar BChl a homologue. The isolated chlorosomes showed a small blue-shift of the QY absorption maximum with respect to intact cells. For the different species, grown under the same light conditions, the homologue composition of BChls c and d was approximately identical whereas for the BChl e in Cb. phaeovibrioides the relative amounts of homologues with larger alkyl substituents at position 8 were considerably larger. Baseplate BChl a was present in all chlorosomes and comprised 1–2% of the chlorosomal BChl. Its QY absorption band was located at about 802 nm and was clearly separated from the major QY absorption band at 6 K. The predominant esterifying alcohol of BChl a in the chlorosomes as well as in the FMO-proteins was phytol, but both antenna complexes also contained small amounts of BChl a esterified with the metabolic intermediates geranylgeraniol, dihydrogeranylgeraniol and tetrahydrogeranylgeraniol, like most purple bacteria. Since the esterifying alcohols of the chlorosomal BChl a and of the main chlorosomal pigments (BChls c, d and e) are different, esterification, and perhaps also the synthesis, of the BChls in the interior of the chlorosome and of the BChls in the baseplate must be spatially and genetically separated processes.  相似文献   

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