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1.
The efficiency of energy transfer from the monomeric pigments to the primary donor was determined from 77 K steady-state fluorescence excitation spectra of three mutant reaction centers, YM210L, YM210F and LM160H / FM197H. For all three reaction centers this efficiency was not 100% and ranged between 55 and 70%. For the YM210L mutant it was shown using pump-probe spectroscopy with B band excitation at 798 nm that the excitations which are not transferred to P give rise to efficient charge separation. The results can be interpreted with a model in which excitation of the B absorbance band leads to direct formation of the radical pair state BA +H A in addition to energy transfer to P. It is also possible that some P+BA is formed from B*. In previous publications we have demonstrated the operation of such alternative pathways for transmembrane electron transfer in a YM210W mutant reaction center [van Brederode et al. (1996) The Reaction center of Photosynthetic Bacteria, pp 225–238; (1997a,b) Chem Phys Lett 268: 143–149; Biochemistry 36: 6855–6861]. The results presented here demonstrate that these alternative mechanisms are not peculiar to the YM210W reaction center.  相似文献   

2.
The reaction center (RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides uses light energy to reduce and protonate a quinone molecule, Q(B) (the secondary quinone electron acceptor), to form quinol, Q(B)H2. Asp-L210 and Asp-M17 have been proposed to be components of the pathway for proton transfer [Axelrod, H. L., Abresch, E. C., Paddock, M. L., Okamura, M. Y., and Feher, G. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97, 1542-1547]. To test the importance of these residues for efficient proton transfer, the rates of the proton-coupled electron-transfer reaction k(AB)(2) (Q(A-*)Q(B-*) + H+ <==>Q(A-*)Q(B)H* --> Q(A)Q(B)H-) and its associated proton uptake were measured in native and mutant RCs, lacking one or both Asp residues. In the double mutant RCs, the k(AB)(2) reaction and its associated proton uptake were approximately 300-fold slower than in native RCs (pH 8). In contrast, single mutant RCs displayed reaction rates that were < or =3-fold slower than native (pH 8). In addition, the rate-limiting step of k(AB)(2) was changed from electron transfer (native and single mutants) to proton transfer (double mutant) as shown from the lack of a dependence of the observed rate on the driving force for electron transfer in the double mutant RCs compared to the native or single mutants. This implies that the rate of the proton-transfer step was reduced (> or =10(3)-fold) upon replacement of both Asp-L210 and Asp-M17 with Asn. Similar, but less drastic, differences were observed for k(AB)(1), which at pH > or =8 is coupled to the protonation of Glu-L212 [(Q(A-*)Q(B))-Glu- + H+ --> (Q(A)Q(B-*)-GluH]. These results show that the pathway for proton transfer from solution to reduced Q(B) involves both Asp-L210 and Asp-M17, which provide parallel branches to the proton-transfer pathway and through their electrostatic interaction have a cooperative effect on the proton-transfer rate. A possible mechanism for the cooperativity is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Primary stage of charge separation and transfer of charges was studied in reaction centers (RCs) of point mutants LL131H and LL131H/LM160H/FM197H of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides by differential absorption spectroscopy with temporal resolution of 18 fsec at 90 K. Difference absorption spectra measured at 0–4 psec delays after excitation of dimer P at 870 nm with 30 fsec step were obtained in the spectral range of 935–1060 nm. It was found that a decay of P* due to charge separation is considerably slower in the mutant RCs in comparison with native RCs of Rba. sphaeroides. Coherent oscillations were found in the kinetics of stimulated emission of the P* state at 940 nm. Fourier analysis of the oscillations revealed a set of characteristic bands in the frequency range of 20–500 cm−1. The most intense band has the frequency of −30 cm−1 in RCs of mutant LL131H and in native RCs and the frequency of ∼100 cm−1 in RCs of the triple mutant. It was found that an absorption band of bacteriochlorophyll anion BA which is registered in the difference absorption spectra of native RCs at 1020 nm is absent in the analogous spectra of the mutants. The results are analyzed in terms of the participation of the BA molecule in the primary electron transfer in the presence of a nuclear wave packet moving along the inharmonic surface of P* potential energy.  相似文献   

4.
The native bacteriopheophytin a in reaction centers of Rb. sphaeroides R26 has been exchanged with modified bacteriopheophytins (bacteriochlorins), as well as with plant-type pheophytins (chlorins). Emphasis is on four pigments, which differ by their C-3 substituents (vinyl or acetyl) or their state of oxidation (chlorin or bacteriochlorin). The native BPhe a, which is a member of this group, can be replaced by the other three at both binding sites, HA and HB. However, exchange at HB proceeds more readily. Optical spectra (absorption, cd) show characteristic shifts, and the cd spectra indicate induced interactions between HA,B and BA,B and possibly also with P. Upon flash illumination, all modified reaction centers show reversible electron transfer to QB with recombination times comparable to native reaction centers. Forward rates and electron-transfer yields are also reported for some of the pigments.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of absorbance changes related to the charge-separated state, PF, and to the formation and decay of the carotenoid triplet state (CarT) were studied in the LM reaction center subunit isolated from a wild-type strain of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides (strain Y). The PF lifetime is lengthened (20±1.5 ns) in the LM complex as compared to the intact reaction centers (11±1 ns). The yield of the carotenoid triplet formation is higher (0.28±0.01) in the LM complex than in native reaction centers. We interpret our results in terms of perturbations of a first-order reaction connecting the singlet and the triplet state of the radical-pair state. Our results, together with those of a recent work (Agalidis, I., Nuijs, A.M. and Reiss-Husson, F. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta (in press)) are consistent with a high I to QA electron transfer rate in this LM subunit, which is metal-depleted.The LM complex is considerably more sensitive than the reaction centers to photooxidative damage in the presence of oxygen. This is not readily accounted for simply by the higher carotenoid triplet yield, and may suggest a greater accessibility of the internal structures in the absence of the H-subunit.The lifetime of the carotenoid triplet decay (6.4±0.3 s) in the LM subunit is unchanged compared to the native reaction centers.Abbreviations BChl bacteriochlorophyll - Bph bacteriopheophytin - Car carotenoid - Chl chlorophyll - cyt cytochrome - L, M and H subunits light, medium and heavy subunits of the reaction center complex - PR triplet electronic state of the primary electron donor - P; QA the first stable electron acceptor, a bound quinone - RC reaction center - LDAO lauryldimethylamine N-oxide - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - UQ ubiquinone This paper is published in our new format. All future authors are requested to follow our new instructions (see Photosynthesis Research 10:519–526, 1986)—Editor.  相似文献   

6.
Chung-Hsien Hung 《BBA》2007,1767(6):686-693
Cytochrome (cyt) b559 has been proposed to play an important role in the cyclic electron flow processes that protect photosystem II (PSII) from light-induced damage during photoinhibitory conditions. However, the exact role(s) of cyt b559 in the cyclic electron transfer pathway(s) in PSII remains unclear. To study the exact role(s) of cyt b559, we have constructed a series of site-directed mutants, each carrying a single amino acid substitution of one of the heme axial-ligands, in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. In these mutants, His-22 of the α or the β subunit of cyt b559 was replaced with either Met, Glu, Tyr, Lys, Arg, Cys or Gln. On the basis of oxygen-evolution and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements, we found that, among all mutants that were constructed, only the H22Kα mutant grew photoautotrophically, and accumulated stable PSII reaction centers (∼ 81% compared to wild-type cells). In addition, we isolated one pseudorevertant of the H22Yβ mutant that regained the ability to grow photoautotrophically and to assemble stable PSII reaction centers (∼ 79% compared to wild-type cells). On the basis of 77 K fluorescence emission measurements, we found that energy transfer from the phycobilisomes to PSII reaction centers was uncoupled in those cyt b559 mutants that assembled little or no stable PSII. Furthermore, on the basis of immunoblot analyses, we found that in thylakoid membranes of cyt b559 mutants that assembled little or no PSII, the amounts of the D1, D2, cyt b559α and β polypeptides were very low or undetectable but their CP47 and PsaC polypeptides were accumulated to the wild-type level. We also found that the amounts of cyt b559β polypeptide were significantly increased (larger than two folds) in thylakoid membranes of cyt b559 H22YβPS+ mutant cells. We suspected that the increase in the amounts of cyt b559 H22YβPS+ mutant polypeptides in thylakoid membranes might facilitate the assembly of functional PSII in cyt b559 H22YβPS+ mutant cells. Moreover, we found that isolated His-tagged PSII particles from H22Kα mutant cells gave rise to redox-induced optical absorption difference spectra of cyt b559. Therefore, our results concluded that significant fractions of H22Kα mutant PSII particles retained the heme of cyt b559. Finally, this work is the first report of cyt b559 mutants having substitutions of an axial heme-ligands that retain the ability to grow photoautotrophically and to assemble stable PSII reaction centers. These two cyt b559 mutants (H22Kα and H22YβPS+) and their PSII reaction centers will be very suitable for further biophysical and biochemical studies of the functional role(s) of cyt b559 in PSII.  相似文献   

7.
Low-temperature absorption, circular dichroism and resonance Raman spectra of the LM units isolated with sodium dodecyl sulfate from wild-type Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides reaction centers (Agalidis, I. and Reiss-Husson, F. (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 724, 340–351) are described in comparison with those of intact reaction centers. In LM unit, the Qy absorption band of P-870 at 77 K shifted from 890 nm (in reaction center) to 870 nm and was broadened by about 30%. In contrast, the 800 nm bacteriochlorophyll absorption band including the 810 species remained unmodified. It was concluded that the 810 nm transition is not the higher excitonic component of P-870. The Qx band of P-870 shifted from 602 nm (in reaction center) to 598 nm in LM, whereas the Qx band of the other bacteriochlorophylls was the same in reaction center and LM and had two components at about 605 and 598 nm. The QxII band of bacteriopheophytin was upshifted to 538 nm and a slight blue shift of the Qy band of bacteriopheophytin was observed. Resonance Raman spectra of spheroidene in LM showed that its native cis-conformation was preserved. Resonance Raman spectroscopy also demonstrated that in LM the molecular interactions assumed by the conjugated carbonyls of bacteriochlorophyll molecules were altered, but not those assumed by the bacteriopheophytins carbonyls. In particular at least one Keto group of bacteriochlorophyll free in reaction center, becomes intermolecularly bounded in LM (possibly with extraneous water). This group may belong to the primary donor molecules.  相似文献   

8.
Reaction centers from the carotenoidless mutant Rb. sphaeroides R26 were treated with sodium borohydride which is known to remove one of the accessory monomeric bacteriochlorophylls (BB). Subsequently, the carotenoid, spheroidene, was incorporated into the modified reaction centers. It is demonstrated by optical absorption and circular dichroism experiments that spheroidene, reconstituted into the sodium borohydride-treated Rb. sphaeroides R26 reaction centers, is bound in a single site, in the same environment and with the same structure as spheroidene reconstituted into untreated (native) Rb. sphaeroides R26 reaction centers. Transient optical and electron spin resonance spectroscopic data indicate that unless the accessory BB is present, the primary donor-to-carotenoid triplet energy transfer reaction is inhibited. These observations provide direct evidence for the involvement of the accessory BB in the triplet energy transfer pathway.  相似文献   

9.
Vos MH  Rischel C  Jones MR  Martin JL 《Biochemistry》2000,39(29):8353-8361
We demonstrate coupling of an intraprotein electron transfer reaction to coherent vibrational motions. The kinetics of charge separation toward the radical pair state P(+)H(L)(-) were studied in reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides at 15 K. The electrochromic shift of the bacteriochlorophyll monomers is the most prominent spectral feature associated with this charge displacement. The newly reported absolute absorption spectrum of the P(+)H(L)(-) state is discussed in terms of this shift. In wild-type reaction centers, the rise kinetics of the electrochromic shift display a small but significant 30 cm(-)(1) periodic modulation (period of approximately 1 ps). This modulation is also present in FL181Y mutant reaction centers, where overall charge separation is somewhat more rapid than in the wild-type reaction center. In contrast, in YM210L mutant reaction centers, where the charge separation is much slower, the modulation is absent. The conclusion that the motion along the reaction coordinate has a 30 cm(-)(1) coherent component is discussed in light of possible mechanisms of electron transfer.  相似文献   

10.
Site-specific mutations in the quinone binding sites of the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) protein complexes of Rhodobacter (R.) capsulatus caused pronounced effects on sequential electron transfer. Conserved residues that break the twofold symmetry in this region of the RC – M246Ala and M247Ala in the QA binding pocket, and L212Glu and L213Asp in the QB binding pocket – were targeted. We constructed a QB-site mutant, L212Glu-L213Asp Ala-Ala, and a QA-site mutant, M246Ala–M247Ala Glu-Asp, to partially balance the differences in charge distribution normally found between the two quinone binding sites. In addition, two photocompetent revertants were isolated from the photosynthetically-incompetent M246Glu-M247Asp mutant: M246Ala–M247Asp and M246Gly–M247Asp. Sequential electron transfer was investigated by continuous light excitation and time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and time-resolved optical techniques. Several lines of EPR evidence suggested that the forward electron transfer rate to QA, kQ, was slowed in those strains containing altered QA sites. The slower rates of secondary electron transfer were confirmed by time-resolved optical results with the M246Glu-M247Asp mutations in the QA site resulting in a dramatically lowered secondary electron transfer efficiency [kQ < (2 ns)-1] in comparison with either the native R. capsulatus RC or the QB site mutant [kQ (200 ps)-1]. Secondary electron transfer in the two revertants was intermediate between that of the native RC and the QA mutant. The P+ QA- PQA charge recombination rates were also changed in the strains that carried altered QA sites. We show that local mutations in the QA site, presumably through local electrostatic changes, significantly alter binding and electron transfer properties of QA.  相似文献   

11.
The electron spin resonance signals of wild type Chlamydomonas reinhardi and three mutant strains having impaired photosynthesis have been investigated. The wild type strain generates two different electron spin resonance signals. Signal I is obtained without illumination (i.e., dark signal) whereas signal II is generated preferentially only by red light. Signal I is missing from wild type cells that have been cultured in the dark, but it returns after these dark-grown cells have been illuminated. Chloroplast fragments obtained from the three mutant strains cannot photoreduce TPN. Two of the strains lack the dark signal I while the third strain has both signal I and signal II. Other studies have revealed that the two mutant strains which lack signal I give no Hill reaction but that they can photoreduce TPN if supplied with an artificial reductant. The mutant strain which has both electron spin resonance signals can carry out the Hill reaction, yet it too will not photoreduce TPN unless reductant is supplied. The electron spin resonance signals generated by the wild type and mutant strains are discussed in terms of the pathway of TPN photoreduction, and it is suggested that signal I is associated with one of the two light-dependent phases of this pathway.  相似文献   

12.
The primary electron donor in the photosynthetic reaction center from purple bacteria is a bacteriochlorophyll dimer containing four conjugated carbonyl groups that may form hydrogen bonds with amino acid residues. Spectroscopic analyses of a set of mutant reaction centers confirm that hydrogen bonds can be formed between each of these carbonyl groups and histidine residues in the reaction center subunits. The addition of each hydrogen bond is correlated with an increase in the oxidation potential of the dimer, resulting in a 355-mV range in the midpoint potential. The resulting changes in the free-energy differences for several reactions involving the dimer are related to the electron transfer rates using the Marcus theory. These reactions include electron transfer from cytochrome c2 to the oxidized dimer, charge recombination from the primary electron acceptor quinone, and the initial forward electron transfer.  相似文献   

13.
The nuclear wavepacket formed by 20-fs excitation on the P* potential energy surface in native and mutant (YM210W and YM210L) reaction centers of Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides and Chloroflexus (C.) aurantiacus RCs was found to be reversibly transferred to the P+BA- surface at 120, 380, and 640-fs delays (monitored by measurements of BA- absorption at 1020-1028 nm). The reaction centers of YM210W(L) mutant show the most simple pattern of fs oscillations with a period of 230 fs in stimulated emission from P* and in the product P+BA-. The mechanisms of the electron transfer pathway between P* and BA and of the stabilization of the state P+BA- in bacterial reaction centers are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Energy and electron transfer in a Leu M214 to His (LM214H) mutant of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides reaction center (RC) were investigated by applying time-resolved visible pump/midinfrared probe spectroscopy at room temperature. This mutant replacement of the Leu at position M214 resulted in the incorporation of a bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) in place of the native bacteriopheophytin in the L-branch of cofactors (denoted βL). Purified LM214H RCs were excited at 600 nm (unselective excitation), at 800 nm (direct excitation of the monomeric BChl cofactors BL and BM), and at 860 nm (direct excitation of the primary donor (P) BChl pair (PL/PM)). Absorption changes associated with carbonyl (C=O) stretch vibrational modes (9-keto, 10a-ester, and 2a-acetyl) of the cofactors and of the protein were recorded in the region between 1600 cm−1 and 1770 cm−1, and the data were subjected to both a sequential analysis and a simultaneous target analysis. After photoexcitation of the LM214H RC, P decayed on a timescale of ∼6.3 ps to P+BL. The decay of P+BL occurred with a lifetime of ∼2 ps, ∼3 times slower than that observed in wild-type and R-26 RCs (∼0.7 ps). Further electron transfer to the βL BChl resulted in formation of the P+βL state, and its infrared absorbance difference spectrum is reported for the first time, to our knowledge. The fs midinfrared spectra of P+BL and P+βL showed clear differences related to the different environments of the two BChls in the mutant RC.  相似文献   

15.
The stepwise synthesis and assembly of photosynthetic membrane components in the y-1 mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardi have been previously demonstrated (Ohad 1975 In Membrane Biogenesis, Mitochondria, Chloroplasts and Bacteria, Plenum, pp 279-350). This experimental system was used here in order to investigate the process of formation and interconnection of the energy collecting chlorophylls with the reaction centers of both photosystems I and II. The following measurements were carried out: photosynthetic electron flow at various light intensities, including parts or the entire electron transfer chain; analysis of the kinetics of fluorescence emission at room temperature and fluorescence emission spectra at 77 K, and electrophoretic separation of membrane polypeptides and chlorophyll protein complexes. Based on the data obtained it is concluded that: (a) each photosystem (PSI and PSII) contains, in addition to the reaction center, an interconnecting antenna and a main or light harvesting antenna complex; (b) the formation of the light harvesting complex, interconnecting antenna, and reaction centers for each photosystem can occur independently. (c) the interconnecting antennae link the light harvesting complexes with the respective reaction centers. In their absence, energy transfer between the light harvesting chlorophylls and the reaction centers is inefficient. The formation of the interconnecting antennae and efficient assembly of photosystem components occur simultaneously with the de novo synthesis of chlorophyll and at least three polypeptides, one translated in the cytoplasm and two translated in the chloroplast. The synthesis of these polypeptides was found to be light dependent.  相似文献   

16.
Reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas spheroides mediate the photochemical oxidation of cytochrome c (cyt c), and show a time-varying fluorescence of P870. Analyses of these effects indicate that the reaction centers contain a primary photochemical electron acceptor capable of holding one electron. Native or added ubiquinone (UQ) can act as a secondary electron acceptor. Orthophenanthroline (o-phen) blocks electron transfer from primary to secondary acceptors, and allows the primary acceptor to be exhibited in the foregoing experiments. Other chelators (with the possible exception of 8-hydroxyquinoline) and dichlorophenyldimethylurea (DCMU) are without apparent effect on reaction centers. o-Phen also inhibits the primary photochemical act in reaction centers; this effect is prevented by the presence of UQ. 2-n-Nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (NQNO) inhibits the primary photochemistry in reaction centers but does not affect secondary electron transfer.  相似文献   

17.
The efficiency of triplet energy transfer from the special pair (P) to the carotenoid (C) in photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from a large family of mutant strains has been investigated. The mutants carry substitutions at positions L181 and/or M208 near chlorophyll-based cofactors on the inactive and active sides of the complex, respectively. Light-modulated electron paramagnetic resonance at 10 K, where triplet energy transfer is thermally prohibited, reveals that the mutations do not perturb the electronic distribution of P. At temperatures > or = 70 K, we observe reduced signals from the carotenoid in most of the RCs with L181 substitutions. In particular, triplet transfer efficiency is reduced in all RCs in which a lysine at L181 donates a sixth ligand to the monomeric bacteriochlorophyll B(B). Replacement of the native Tyr at M208 on the active side of the complex with several polar residues increased transfer efficiency. The difference in the efficiencies of transfer in the RCs demonstrates the ability of the protein environment to influence the electronic overlap of the chromophores and thus the thermal barrier for triplet energy transfer.  相似文献   

18.
Chuang JI  Boxer SG  Holten D  Kirmaier C 《Biochemistry》2006,45(12):3845-3851
We present studies on a series of photosynthetic reaction center (RC) mutants created in the background of the Rhodobacter capsulatus D(LL) mutant, in which the D helix of the M subunit has been substituted with that from the L subunit. Previous work on the D(LL) mutant in chromatophore preparations showed that RCs assembled without the bacteriopheophytin H(L) electron acceptor and performed no charge separation following light absorption. We have successfully isolated poly-His-tagged D(LL) RCs by using the detergent Deriphat 160-C and shown that the RCs are devoid of H(L). The excited state of the primary electron donor, P*, is found to have a lifetime of 180 +/- 20 ps and to decay exclusively (>95%) via internal conversion to the ground state, with no evidence for formation of any charge-separated intermediates. By additional mutation in the D(LL) background of two residues that affect the P/P+ oxidation potential and one that facilitates M-side electron transfer, we achieve an unprecedented 70% yield of P+ H(M)-, more than doubling the highest yield of this state achieved previously. This result underscores the importance of the relative free energies of P* and the charge-separated states in governing the rates and yields of electron transfer in bacterial RCs and provides a basis for systematically investigating M-side electron transfer without any competition from the native L-side pathway.  相似文献   

19.
《BBA》1987,891(3):265-274
Detailed calculations on the spin-dependent recombination dynamics are presented for reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26 in which electron transfer from the primary radical pair to the iron-quinone acceptor complex has been slowed down by either iron depletion or replacement of the native ubiquinone by other quinones with different midpoint potential. Recombination yields reported for iron-depleted samples (Kirmaier, C., Holten, D., Debus, R.J., Feher, G. and Okamura, M.Y. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83, in the press) are compared to those in quinone-depleted reaction centers, where the forward electron transfer is completely blocked by extraction of the quinone. Within the scatter of the experimental data, the recombination pattern appears to be similar in the two different preparations indicating that the structural and kinetic features of the recombining radical pair state are not seriously affected by removal of the iron.  相似文献   

20.
In Rhodobacter sphaeroides reaction centers (RCs) containing the mutation Ala M260 to Trp (AM260W), transmembrane electron transfer along the full-length of the A-branch of cofactors is prevented by the loss of the Q(A) ubiquinone, but it is possible to generate the radical pair P(+)H(A)(-) by A-branch electron transfer or the radical pair P(+)Q(B)(-) by B-branch electron transfer. In the present study, FTIR spectroscopy was used to provide direct evidence for the complete absence of the Q(A) ubiquinone in mutant RCs with the AM260W mutation. Light-induced FTIR difference spectroscopy of isolated RCs was also used to probe the neutral Q(B) and the semiquinone Q(B)(-) states in two B-branch active mutants, a double AM260W-LM214H mutant, denoted WH, and a quadruple mutant, denoted WAAH, in which the AM260W, LM214H, and EL212A-DL213A mutations were combined. The data were compared to those obtained with wild-type (Wt) RCs and the double EL212A-DL213A (denoted AA) mutant which exhibit the usual A-branch electron transfer to Q(B). The Q(B)(-)/Q(B) spectrum of the WH mutant is very close to that of Wt RCs indicating similar bonding interactions of Q(B) and Q(B)(-) with the protein in both RCs. The Q(B)(-)/Q(B) spectra of the AA and WAAH mutants are also closely related to one another, but are very different to that of the Wt complex. Isotope-edited IR fingerprint spectra were obtained for the AA and WAAH mutants reconstituted with site-specific (13)C-labeled ubiquinone. Whilst perturbations of the interactions of the semiquinone Q(B)(-) with the protein are observed in the AA and WAAH mutants, the FTIR data show that the bonding interaction of neutral Q(B) in these two mutants are essentially the same as those for Wt RCs. Therefore, it is concluded that Q(B) occupies the same binding position proximal to the non-heme iron prior to reduction by either A-branch or B-branch electron transfer.  相似文献   

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