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1.
A large scale mutation of the Rhodobacter capsulatus reaction center M-subunit gene, sym2-1, has been constructed in which amino acid residues M205-M210 have been changed to the corresponding L subunit amino acids. Two interconvertable spectral forms of the initial electron donor are observed in isolated reaction centers from this mutant. Which conformation dominates depends on ionic strength, the nature of the detergent used, and the temperature. Reaction centers from this mutant have a ground-state absorbance spectrum that is very similar to wild-type when measured immediately after purification in the presence of high salt. However, upon subsequent dialysis against a low ionic strength buffer or the addition of positively charged detergents, the near-infrared spectral band of P (the initial electron donor) in sym2-1 reaction centers is shifted by over 30 nm to the blue, from 852 to 820 nm. Systematically varying either the ionic strength or the amount of charged detergent reveals an isobestic point in the absorbance spectrum at 845 nm. The wild-type spectrum also shifts with ionic strength or detergent with an isobestic point at 860 nm. The large spectral separation between the two dominant conformational forms of the sym2-1 reaction center makes detailed measurements of each state possible. Both of the spectral forms of P bleach in the presence of light. Electrochemical measurements of the P/P+ midpoint potential of sym2-1 reaction centers show an increase of about 30 mV upon conversion from the long-wavelength form to the short-wavelength form of the mutant. The rate constant of initial electron transfer in both forms of the mutant reaction centers is essentially the same, suggesting that the spectral characteristics of P are not critical for charge separation. The short-wavelength form of P in this mutant also converts to the long-wavelength form as a function of temperature between room temperature and 130 K, again giving rise to an isobestic point, in this case at 838 nm for the mutant. A similar, though considerably less pronounced spectral change with temperature occurs in wild-type reaction centers, with an isobestic point at about 855 nm, close to that found by titrating with ionic strength or detergent. Fitting the temperature dependence of the sym2-1 reaction center spectrum to a thermodynamic model resulted in a value for the enthalpy of the conformational interconversion between the short- and long-wavelength forms of about -6 kJ/mol and an entropy of interconversion of about -35 J/(K mol). Similar values of enthapy and entropy changes can be used to model the temperature dependence in wild-type. Thus, much of the temperature dependence of the reaction center special pair near-infrared absorbance band can be described as an equilibrium shift between two spectrally distinct conformations of the reaction center.  相似文献   

2.
The redox properties, absorption, electroabsorption, CD, EPR, and P+QA- recombination kinetics have been measured for the special pairs of two mutants of Rhodobacter capsulatus reaction centers involving amino acid changes in the vicinity of the special pair, P. Both mutants symmetrize amino acid residues so that portions of the M-sequence are replaced with L-sequence: sym1 symmetrizes all residues between M187 and M203, whereas (M)F195H is a single amino acid subset of the sym1 mutation. (M)F195H introduces a His residue in a position where it is likely to form a hydrogen bond to the acetyl group of the M-side bacteriochlorophyll of P. For both mutants compared with wild-type, (i) the redox potential is at least 100 meV greater, (ii) the P+QA- recombination rate is about twice as fast at room temperature, and (iii) the large electroabsorption feature for the QY band of P is shifted relative to the absorption spectrum. The comparison of the properties observed for the sym1 and (M)F195H reaction center mutants and the differences between these mutants and wild-type suggest that residue M195 is an important determinant of the properties of the special pair.  相似文献   

3.
Chen IP  Mathis P  Koepke J  Michel H 《Biochemistry》2000,39(13):3592-3602
The cytochrome (cyt) subunit of the photosynthetic reaction center from Rhodopseudomonas viridis contains four heme groups in a linear arrangement in the spatial order heme1, heme2, heme4, and heme3. Heme3 is the direct electron donor to the photooxidized primary electron donor (special pair, P(+)). This heme has the highest redox potential (E(m)) among the hemes in the cyt subunit. The E(m) of heme3 has been specifically lowered by site-directed mutagenesis in which the Arg residue at the position of 264 of the cyt was replaced by Lys. The mutation decreases the E(m) of heme3 from +380 to +270 mV, i.e., below that of heme2 (+320 mV). In addition, a blue shift of the alpha-band was found to accompany the mutation. The assignment of the lowered E(m) and the shifted alpha-band to heme3 was confirmed by spectroscopic measurements on RC crystals. The structure of the mutant RC has been determined by X-ray crystallography. No remarkable differences were found in the structure apart from the mutated residue itself. The velocity of the electron transfer (ET) from the tetraheme cyt to P(+) was measured under several redox conditions by following the rereduction of P(+) at 1283 nm after a laser flash. Heme3 donates an electron to P(+) with t(1/2) = 105 ns, i.e., faster than in the wild-type reaction center (t(1/2) = 190 ns), as expected from the larger driving force. The main feature is that a phase with t(1/2) approximately 2 micros dominates when heme3 is oxidized but heme2 is reduced. We conclude that the ET from heme2 to heme3 has a t(1/2) of approximately 2 micros, i.e., the same as in the WT, despite the fact that the reaction is endergonic by 50 meV instead of exergonic by 60 meV. We propose that the reaction kinetics is limited by the very uphill ET from heme2 to heme4, the DeltaG degrees of which is about the same (+230 meV) in both cases. The interpretation is further supported by measurements of the activation energy (216 meV in the wild-type, 236 meV in the mutant) and by approximate calculations of ET rates. Altogether these results demonstrate that the ET from heme2 to heme3 is stepwise, starting with a first very endergonic step from heme2 to heme4.  相似文献   

4.
In the native purple bacterial reaction center (RC), light-driven charge separation utilizes only the A-side cofactors, with the symmetry related B-side inactive. The process is initiated by electron transfer from the excited primary donor (P*) to the A-side bacteriopheophytin (P* --> P+ H(A)-) in approximately 3 ps. This is followed by electron transfer to the A-side quinone (P+ H(A)- --> P+ Q(A)-) in approximately 200 ps, with an overall quantum yield of approximately 100%. Using nanosecond flash photolysis and RCs from the Rhodobacter capsulatus F(L181)Y/Y(M208)F/L(M212)H mutant (designated YFH), we have probed the decay pathways of the analogous B-side state P+ H(B)-. The rate of the P+ H(B)- --> ground-state charge-recombination process is found to be (3.0 +/- 0.8 ns)(-1), which is much faster than the analogous (10-20 ns)(-1) rate of P+ H(A)- --> ground state. The rate of P+ H(B)- --> P+ Q(B)- electron transfer is determined to be (3.9 +/- 0.9 ns)(-1), which is about a factor of 20 slower than the analogous A-side process P+ H(A)- --> P+ Q(A)-. The yield of P+ H(B)- --> P+ Q(B)- electron-transfer calculated from these rate constants is 44%. This value, when combined with the known 30% yield of P+ H(B)- from P in YFH RCs, gives an overall yield of 13% for B-side charge separation P* --> P+ H(B)- --> P+ Q(B)- in this mutant. We determine essentially the same value (15%) by comparing the P-bleaching amplitude at approximately 1 ms in YFH and wild-type RCs.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Electrostatic control of charge separation in bacterial photosynthesis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Electrostatic interaction energies of the electron carriers with their surroundings in a photosynthetic bacterial reaction center are calculated. The calculations are based on the detailed crystal structure of reaction centers from Rhodopseu-domonas viridis, and use an iterative, self-consistent procedure to evaluate the effects of induced dipoles in the protein and the surrounding membrane. To obtain the free energies of radical-pair states, the calculated electrostatic interaction energies are combined with the experimentally measured midpoint redox potentials of the electron carriers and of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) and bacteriopheophytin (BPh) in vitro. The P+HL- radical-pair, in which an electron has moved from the primary electron donor (P) to a BPh on the 'L' side of the reaction center (HL), is found to lie approx. 2.0 kcal/mol below the lowest excited singlet state (P*), when the radical-pair is formed in the static crystallographic structure. The reorganization energy for the subsequent relaxation of P+HL- is calculated to be 5.0 kcal/mol, so that the relaxed radical-pair lies about 7 kcal/mol below P*. The unrelaxed P+BL- radical-pair, in which the electron acceptor is the accessory BChl located between P and HL, appears to be essentially isoenergetic with P*.P+BM-, in which an electron moves to the BChl on the 'M' side, is calculated to lie about 5.5 kcal/mol above P*. These results have an estimated error range of +/- 2.5 kcal/mol. They are shown to be relatively insensitive to various details of the model, including the charge distribution in P+, the atomic charges used for the amino acid residues, the boundaries of the structural region that is considered microscopically and the treatments of the histidyl ligands of P and of potentially ionizable amino acids. The calculated free energies are consistent with rapid electron transfer from P* to HL by way of BL, and with a much slower electron transfer to the pigments on the M side. Tyrosine M208 appears to play a particularly important role in lowering the energy of P+BL-. Electrostatic interactions with the protein favor localization of the positive charge of P+ on PM, one of the two BChl molecules that make up the electron donor.  相似文献   

7.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy has been used to examine the triplet states in reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides which have undergone a genetic modification affecting the primary donor. Reaction centers containing the HisL173LeuL173 substitution in the amino acid sequence have a primary donor which consists of a BChl-BPh heterodimer. The triplets formed in this heterodimer reaction center were compared with those formed in the wild-type reaction center which contains the BChl-BChl homodimer. Both reaction centers transfer triplet energy to the carotenoid under illumination at liquid nitrogen temperatures (90 K). However, the intensity of the carotenoid triplet signal is significantly decreased in the LeuL173 mutant compared with the wild-type reaction center. At 12 K, in wild-type reaction centers only the primary donor triplet is observed. The LeuL173 mutant exhibits a signal similar to that observed by Bylina et al. (1990) in HisM200LeuM200 mutant reaction centers from Rb. capsulatus. The values of the zero-field splitting parameters of this triplet are discussed within the context of various models for the primary donor triplet state. No alteration in the ability of the carotenoid to quench the primary donor triplet state results from mutations at these sites.Abbreviations BChl bacteriochlorophyll - BPh bacteriopheophytin - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - LDAO lauryl-dimethylamine N-oxide  相似文献   

8.
Wakeham MC  Breton J  Nabedryk E  Jones MR 《Biochemistry》2004,43(16):4755-4763
In Rhodobacter sphaeroides reaction centers containing the mutation Ala M260 to Trp (AM260W), transmembrane electron transfer along the A-branch of cofactors is prevented by the loss of the QA ubiquinone. Reaction centers that contain this AM260W mutation are proposed to photoaccumulate the P(+)QB- radical pair following transmembrane electron transfer along the B-branch of cofactors (Wakeham, M. C., Goodwin, M. G., McKibbin, C., and Jones, M. R. (2003) Photoaccumulation of the P(+)QB- radical pair state in purple bacterial reaction centers that lack the QA ubiquinone. FEBS Lett. 540, 234-240). The yield of the P(+)QB- state appears to depend upon which additional mutations are present. In the present paper, Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy was used to demonstrate that photooxidation of the reaction center's primary donor in QA-deficient reaction centers results in formation of a semiquinone at the QB site by B-branch electron transfer. Reduction of QB by the B-branch pathway still occurs at 100 K, with a yield of approximately 10% relative to that at room temperature, in contrast to the QA- to QB reaction in the wild-type reaction center, which is not active at cryogenic temperatures. These FTIR results suggest that the conformational changes that "gate" the QA- to QB reaction do not necessarily have the same influence on QB reduction when the electron donor is the HB anion, at least in a minority of reaction centers.  相似文献   

9.
G H Noren  B A Barry 《Biochemistry》1992,31(13):3335-3342
The currently accepted model for the location of the redox-active tyrosines, D and Z, in photosystem II suggests that they are symmetrically located on the D1 and D2 polypeptides, which are believed to form the heterodimer core of the reaction center. Z, the electron conduit from the manganese catalytic site to the primary chlorophyll donor, has been identified with tyrosine-161 of D1. The YF161D1 mutant of Synechocystis 6803 [Debus, R. J., Barry, B. A., Sithole, I., Babcock, G. T., & McIntosh, L. (1988b) Biochemistry 27, 9071-9074; Metz, J. G., Nixon, P. J., Rogner, M., Brudvig, G. W., & Diner, B. A. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6960-6969], in which this tyrosine has been changed to a phenylalanine, should have no light-induced EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) signal from a tyrosine radical. This negative result has indeed been obtained in analysis of one of two independently constructed mutants through the use of a non-oxygen-evolving core preparation (Metz et al., 1989). Here, we present an analysis of a YF161D1 mutant through the use of a photosystem II purification procedure that gives oxygen-evolving particles from wild-type Synechocystis cultures. In our mutant preparation, a light-induced EPR signal from a photosystem II radical is observed under conditions in which, in a wild-type preparation, we can accumulate an EPR signal from Z+. This EPR signal has a different lineshape from that of the Z+ tyrosine radical, and spin quantitation shows that this radical can be produced in up to 60% of the mutant reaction centers. The EPR lineshape of this radical suggests that photosystem II reaction centers of the YF161D1 mutant contain a redox-active amino acid.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The temperature dependence of the bacteriochlorophyll fluorescence and reaction center triplet yield in while cells of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides strain 2.4.1 and of the magnetic field-induced fluorescence increase are calculated, taking into account rate constants of losses in the antenna system and of charge separation and recombination in the reaction center. Triplet and singlet yield after recombination in the reaction center are described by the radical pair mechanism. Good fits of the theoretically calculated temperature dependence with published experimental results could be obtained, assuming that ks, the rate constant for recombination of the charges on the primary donor P+ and the reduced intermediate acceptor I- to the lowest excited singlet state P*I of the reaction center bacteriochlorophyll, is temperature-dependent via the Boltzmann factor Kso exp(-delta E/kT), where delta E is the energy difference between P*I and P+I- and kso is the frequency factor. kg and/or kt, the rate constants for recombination to the singlet ground and triplet states, respectively, were assumed to be temperature-independent, or temperature-dependent via their exothermicity factors ki = CiT-1/2 exp(-Ei/kT) with i = g, t. Depending on the particular choice for the temperature dependence of kg and kt, best fits were obtained for delta E = 45-75 meV and recombination rate constants at 300 K of ks = 0.4-0.8 ns-1, kg = 0.08-0.12 ns-1, and kt = 0.3-0.5 ns-1. The model predicts a lifetime of the radical pair P+I- that is somewhat larger than that of delayed fluorescence; a magnetic field increases both.  相似文献   

12.
A key step in the photosynthetic reactions in photosystem II of green plants is the transfer of an electron from the singlet-excited chlorophyll molecule called P680 to a nearby pheophytin molecule. The free energy difference of this primary charge separation reaction is determined in isolated photosystem II reaction center complexes as a function of temperature by measuring the absolute quantum yield of P680 triplet formation and the time-integrated fluorescence emission yield. The total triplet yield is found to be 0.83 +/- 0.05 at 4 K, and it decreases upon raising the temperature to 0.30 at 200 K. It is suggested that the observed triplet states predominantly arise from P680 but to a minor extent also from antenna chlorophyll present in the photosystem II reaction center. No carotenoid triplet states could be detected, demonstrating that the contamination of the preparation with CP47 complexes is less than 1/100 reaction centers. The fluorescence yield is 0.07 +/- 0.02 at 10 K, and it decreases upon raising the temperature to reach a value of 0.05-0.06 at 60-70 K, increases upon raising the temperature to 0.07 at approximately 165 K and decreases again upon further raising the temperature. The complex dependence of fluorescence quantum yield on temperature is explained by assuming the presence of one or more pigments in the photosystem II reaction center that are energetically degenerate with the primary electron donor P680 and below 60-70 K trap part of the excitation energy, and by temperature-dependent excited state decay above 165 K. A four-compartment model is presented that describes the observed triplet and fluorescence quantum yields at all temperatures and includes pigments that are degenerate with P680, temperature-dependent excited state decay and activated upward energy transfer rates. The eigenvalues of the model are in accordance with the lifetimes observed in fluorescence and absorption difference measurements by several workers. The model suggests that the free energy difference between singlet-excited P680 and the radical pair state P680+l- is temperature independent, and that a distribution of free energy differences represented by at least three values of about 20, 40, and 80 meV, is needed to get an appropriate fit of the data.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The influence of the protein environment on the primary electron donor, P, a bacteriochlorophyll a dimer, of reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, has been investigated using electron paramagnetic resonance and electron nuclear double resonance spectroscopy. These techniques were used to probe the effects on P that are due to alteration of three amino acid residues, His L168, Asn L170, and Asn M199. The introduction of Glu at L168, Asp at L170, or Asp at M199 changes the oxidation/reduction midpoint potential of P in a pH-dependent manner (Williams et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 15403-15407). For the double mutant His L168 to Glu and Asn at L170 to Asp, excitation results in electron transfer along the A-side branch of cofactors at pH 7.2, but at pH 9.5, a long-lived state involving B-side cofactors is produced (Haffa et al. (2004) J Phys Chem B 108, 4-7). Using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, the mutants with alterations of each of the three individual residues and a double mutant, with changes at L168 and L170, were found to have increased linewidths of 10.1-11.0 G compared to the linewidth of 9.6 G for wild type. The Special TRIPLE spectra were pH dependent, and at pH 8, the introduction of aspartate at L170 increased the spin density ratio, rho (L)/rho (M), to 6.1 while an aspartate at the symmetry related position, M199, decreased the ratio to 0.7 compared to the value of 2.1 for wild type. These results indicate that the energy of the two halves of P changes by about 100 meV due to the mutations and are consistent with the interpretation that electrostatic interactions involving these amino acid residues contribute to the switch in pathway of electron transfer.  相似文献   

15.
In a previous study, we characterized a high chlorophyll fluorescence lpa1 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, in which approximately 20% photosystem (PS) II protein is accumulated. In the present study, analysis of fluorescence decay kinetics and thermoluminescence profiles demonstrated that the electron transfer reaction on either the donor or acceptor side of PSII remained largely unaffected in the lpa1 mutant. In the mutant, maximal photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm, where Fm is the maximum fluorescence yield and Fv is variable fluorescence) decreased with increasing light intensity and remained almost unchanged in wild-type plants under different light conditions. The Fv/Fm values also increased when mutant plants were transferred from standard growth light to low light conditions. Analysis of PSII protein accumulation further confirmed that the amount of PSII reaction center protein is correlated with changes in Fv/Fm in lpa1 plants. Thus, the assembled PSII in the mutant was functional and also showed increased photosensitivity compared with wild-type plants.(Author for correspondence. Tel: +86 (0)10 6283 6256; Fax: +86 (0)10 8259 9384; E-mail: zhanglixin@ibcas.ac.cn)  相似文献   

16.
The reorganization energy (lambda) for electron transfer from the primary electron donor (P*) to the adjacent bacteriochlorophyll (B) in photosynthetic bacterial reaction centers is explored by molecular-dynamics simulations. Relatively long (40 ps) molecular-dynamics trajectories are used, rather than free energy perturbation techniques. When the surroundings of the reaction center are modeled as a membrane, lambda for P* B --> P+ B- is found to be approximately 1.6 kcal/mol. The results are not sensitive to the treatment of the protein's ionizable groups, but surrounding the reaction center with water gives higher values of lambda (approximately 6.5 kcal/mol). In light of the evidence that P+ B- lies slightly below P* in energy, the small lambda obtained with the membrane model is consistent with the speed and temperature independence of photochemical charge separation. The calculated reorganization energy is smaller than would be expected if the molecular dynamics trajectories had sampled the full conformational space of the system. Because the system does not relax completely on the time scale of electron transfer, the lambda obtained here probably is more pertinent than the larger value that would be obtained for a fully equilibrated system.  相似文献   

17.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) has been used to investigate the cation and triplet states of Rhodobacter capsulatus reaction centers (RCs) containing amino acid substitutions affecting the primary donor, monomeric bacteriochlorophylls (Bchls), and the photoactive bacteriopheophytin (Bphe). The broadened line width of the cation radical in HisM200----Leu and HisM200----Phe reaction centers, whose primary donor consists of a Bchl-Bphe heterodimer, indicates a highly asymmetric distribution of the unpaired electron over the heterodimer. A T0 polarized triplet state with reduced yield is observed in heterodimer-containing RCs. The zero field splitting parameters indicate that this triplet essentially resides on the Bchl half of the heterodimer. The cation and triplet states of reaction centers containing HisM200----Gln, HisL173----Gln, GluL104----Gln, or GluL104----Leu substitutions are similar to those observed in wild type. Oligonucleotide-mediated mutagenesis has been used to change the histidine residues that are positioned near the central Mg2+ ions of the reaction center monomeric bacteriochlorophylls. Reaction centers containing serine substitutions at M180 and L153 or a threonine substitution at L153 have unaltered pigment compositions and are photochemically active. The cation and triplet states of HisL153----Leu reaction centers are similar to those observed in wild type. Triplet energy transfer to carotenoid is not observed at 100 K in HisM180----Arg chromatophores. These results have important implications for the structural requirements of tetrapyrrole binding and for our understanding of the mechanisms of primary electron transfer in the reaction center.  相似文献   

18.
Glutamate-gated chloride (GluCl) channels are pentameric receptors for the inhibitory neurotransmitter glutamate in invertebrates and are a major target for macrolide anthelmintics. Three amino acids in GluCl channels are reported to render macrolide resistance in nematodes and insects. To examine whether these three amino acids are involved in binding of the antiparasitic agent milbemycin (MLM) to the GluCl channels of the nematode parasite Haemonchus contortus, the equivalent amino acids (L256, P316, and G329) of the Hco-AVR-14B subunit were substituted with various amino acids. cDNAs encoding the wild type and mutants of this subunit were transfected into COS-1 cells for transient expression and analysis of GluCl channels. The abilities of these mutant channels to bind [(3)H]MLM A(4) were remarkably decreased when compared with the wild-type channel. In patch clamp analysis, L256F and P316S mutant channels were 37- and 100-fold less sensitive to MLM A(4) when compared with the wild-type channel, respectively. These findings indicate that amino acid changes in the β10 strand, the M2-M3 linker, and the M3 region influence MLM A(4) binding to the channel. Homology modeling and ligand docking studies suggest the presence of two potential binding sites for MLM A(4).  相似文献   

19.
M Polm  K Brettel 《Biophysical journal》1998,74(6):3173-3181
Photoinduced electron transfer in photosystem I (PS I) proceeds from the excited primary electron donor P700 (a chlorophyll a dimer) via the primary acceptor A0 (chlorophyll a) and the secondary acceptor A1 (phylloquinone) to three [4Fe-4S] clusters, Fx, FA, and FB. Prereduction of the iron-sulfur clusters blocks electron transfer beyond A1. It has been shown previously that, under such conditions, the secondary pair P700+A1- decays by charge recombination with t1/2 approximately 250 ns at room temperature, forming the P700 triplet state (3P700) with a yield exceeding 85%. This reaction is unusual, as the secondary pair in other photosynthetic reaction centers recombines much slower and forms directly the singlet ground state rather than the triplet state of the primary donor. Here we studied the temperature dependence of secondary pair recombination in PS I from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC6803, which had been illuminated in the presence of dithionite at pH 10 to reduce all three iron-sulfur clusters. The reaction P700+A1- --> 3P700 was monitored by flash absorption spectroscopy. With decreasing temperature, the recombination slowed down and the yield of 3P700 decreased. In the range between 303 K and 240 K, the recombination rates could be described by the Arrhenius law with an activation energy of approximately 170 meV. Below 240 K, the temperature dependence became much weaker, and recombination to the singlet ground state became the dominating process. To explain the fast activated recombination to the P700 triplet state, we suggest a mechanism involving efficient singlet to triplet spin evolution in the secondary pair, thermally activated repopulation of the more closely spaced primary pair P700+A0- in a triplet spin configuration, and subsequent fast recombination (intrinsic rate on the order of 10(9) s(-1)) forming 3P700.  相似文献   

20.
The purple photosynthetic bacterium Rubrivivax gelatinosus has, at least, four periplasmic electron carriers, i.e., HiPIP, two cytochromes c?with low- and high-midpoint potentials, and cytochrome c? as electron donors to the photochemical reaction center. The quadruple mutant lacking all four electron carrier proteins showed extremely slow photosynthetic growth. During the long-term cultivation of this mutant under photosynthetic conditions, a suppressor strain recovering the wild-type growth level appeared. In the cells of the suppressor strain, we found significant accumulation of a soluble c-type cytochrome that has not been detected in wild-type cells. This cytochrome c has a redox midpoint potential of about +280 mV and could function as an electron donor to the photochemical reaction center in vitro. The amino acid sequence of this cytochrome c was 65% identical to that of the high-potential cytochrome c?of this bacterium. The gene for this cytochrome c was identified as nirM on the basis of its location in the newly identified nir operon, which includes a gene coding cytochrome cd?-type nitrite reductase. Phylogenetic analysis and the well-conserved nir operon gene arrangement suggest that the origin of the three cytochromes c? in this bacterium is NirM. The two other cytochromes c?, of high and low potentials, proposed to be generated by gene duplication from NirM, have evolved to function in distinct pathways.  相似文献   

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