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1.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra were recorded of whole filaments of the cyanobacteria Nostoc muscorum and Anabaena cylindrica. Signals due to manganese were removed by freezing and thawing the cells in EDTA. EPR spectra were assigned on the basis of their g values, linewidths, temperature dependence and response to dithionite and light treatments. The principal components identified were: (i) rhombic Fe3+ (signal at g = 4.3), probably a soluble storage form of iron; (ii) iron-sulfur centers A and B of Photosystem I; (iii) the photochemical electron acceptor 'X' of Photosystem I; this component was also observed for the first time in isolated heterocysts; (iv) soluble ferredoxin which was present at a concentration of 1 molecule per 140 +/- 20 chlorophyll molecules; (v) a membrane-bound iron-sulfur protein (g = 1.92). A signal g = 6 in the oxidized state was probably due to an unidentified heme compound. During deprivation of iron the rhombic Fe3+, centers A, B and X of Photosystem I, and soluble ferredoxin were all observed to decrease.  相似文献   

2.
Incubation of thylakoid membranes from spinach with low concentrations of mercuric chloride induces the loss of one of the iron-sulfur centers, FB, in Photosystem I (PS I) and inhibits the electron transfer from PS I to the soluble electron carrier, ferredoxin. Reconstitution of this damaged iron-sulfur center has been carried out by incubating treated thylakoid membranes with exogenous FeCl3 and Na2S in the presence of-mercaptoethanol under anaerobic conditions. Low temperature EPR measurements indicate that center FB is largely restored. Kinetic experiments show that the restored FB can be photoreduced from P700. However, these reconstituted thylakoid membranes are still incompetent in the photoreduction of ferredoxin and NADP+, even though ferredoxin binding to the modified membranes was not impaired, indicating additional changes in the structure of the PS I complex must have occurred.  相似文献   

3.
In an earlier investigation (Shanmugam, K. T., Buchanan, B. B., and Arnon, D. I. (1972) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 256, 477-486) the extraction of ferredoxin from Rhodospirillum rubrum cells with the aid of a detergent (Triton X-100) and acetone revealed the existence of two types of ferredoxin (I and II) and led to the conclusion that both are membrane-bound. In the present investigation, ferredoxin and acid-labile sulfur analyses of photosynthetic membranes (chromatophores) and soluble protein extracts of the photosynthetic bacteria R. rubrum and Rhodopseudomonas spheroides showed that ferredoxins I and II are primarily components of the soluble protein fraction. After their removal, washed R. rubrum chromatophores were found to contain a considerable amount of tightly bound iron-sulfur protein(s), as evidenced by acid-labile sulfur and electron paramagnetic resonance analyses. Thus, like all other photosynthetic cells examined to date, R. rubrum cells contain both soluble ferredoxins and iron-sulfur proteins tightly bound to photosynthetic membranes. The molecular weights of ferredoxins I and II from photosynthetically grown R. rubrum cells were found to be 8,800 and 14,500, respectively. Using these molecular weights, the molar extinction coefficients at 390 nm for ferredoxins I and II were determined to be 30.3 and 17.2 mM-1 CM-1, respectively. Ferredoxin I contains 8 non-heme iron and 8 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule; ferredoxin II contains 4 non-heme iron and 4 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule. Ferredoxin I was found only in photosynthetically grown cells whereas ferredoxin II was present in both light- and dark-grown cells. Ferredoxin II from both light- and dark-grown cells has the same molecular weight (14,500) and absorption spectrum and has 4 iron and 4 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule. Low temperature electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of oxidized and photoreduced ferredoxins I and II from R. rubrum were recorded. The EPR spectrum of oxidized ferredoxin II exhibited a single resonance line at g = 2.012. Oxidized ferredoxin I, however, exhibited a spectrum that may arise from the superimposition of two resonance lines near g = 2.012. Photoreduced ferredoxin II displayed a rhombic EPR spectrum with a g value of 1.94. Photoreduced ferredoxin I exhibited a similar EPR spectrum at a temperature of 16 K, but when the temperature was lowered to 4.5 K the spectrum of ferredoxin I changed. This temperature-dependent spectrum may result from a weak spin-spin interaction between two iron-sulfur clusters. These results are consistent with the conclusion that R. rubrum ferredoxins I and II are, respectively, 8 iron/8 sulfur and 4 iron/4sulfur proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Cultures of the blue-green alga, Aphanocapsa, were grown under iron-limiting conditions and changes in concentration of redox components of the photosynthetic electron transport chain, particularly iron-sulfur centers, were monitored by spectroscopic methods. A moderate iron depletion (1/10 of the normal concentration) had little effect on photosynthetic electron transport reactions and growth. Nevertheless, the amount of membrane-bound non-heme iron decreased sharply, and ferredoxin was nearly totally replaced by a flavin-containing protein, flavodoxin. Severe iron-deficiency (1/100 of the normal concentration) was accompanied by growth inhibition and decreased rates of photosynthetic electron flow. The Photosystem I reaction center was most affected by iron depletion as evidenced by a decrease in the amounts of iron-sulfur centers A, B, and X. However, formation of other redox proteins, even those that do not contain iron, was also inhibited by severe iron deficiency.  相似文献   

5.
The Photosystem I acceptor system of a subchloroplast particle from spinach was investigated by optical and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy following graduated inactivation of the bound iron-sulfur proteins by urea/ferricyanide solution. The chemical analysis of iron and sulfur and the ESR properties of centers A, B and X are consistent with the participation of three iron-sulfur centers in Photosystem I. A differential decrease in centers A, B and X is observed under conditions that induce S2? →S0 conversion in the bound iron-sulfur proteins. Center B is shown to be the most susceptible, while center ‘X’ is the least susceptible component to oxidative denaturation. Stepwise inactivation experiments suggest that electron transport in Photosystem I does not occur sequentially from X→B→A, since there is quantitative photoreduction of center A in the absence of center B. We propose that center A is directly reduced by X; thus, X may serve as a branch point for parallel electron flow through centers A and B.  相似文献   

6.
《BBA》1987,891(3):286-292
Photosystem I charge separation in a subchloroplast particle isolated from spinach was investigated by electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy following graduated inactivation of the bound iron-sulfur centers by urea-ferricyanide treatment. Previous work demonstrated a differential decrease in iron-sulfur centers A, B and X which indicated that center X serves as a branch point for parallel electron flow through centers A and B (Golbeck, J.H. and Warden, J.T. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 681, 77–84). We now show that during inactivation the disappearance of iron-sulfur centers A, B, and X correlates with the appearance of a spin-polarized triplet ESR signal with |D| = 279·10−4 cm−1 and |E| = 39·10−4 cm−1. The triplet resonances titrate with a midpoint potential of +380 ± 10 mV. Illumination of the inactivated particles results in the generation of an asymmetric ESR signal with g = 2.0031 and ΔHpp = 1.0 mT. Deconvolution of the P-700+ contribution to this composite resonance reveals the spectrum of the putative primary acceptor species, A0, which is characterized by g = 2.0033 ± 0.0004 and ΔHpp = 1.0 ± 0.2 mT. The data presented in this report do not substantiate the participation of the electron acceptor A1 in PS I electron transport, following destruction of the iron-sulfur cluster corresponding to center X. We suggest that A1 is closely associated with center X and that this component is decoupled from the electron-transport path upon destruction of center X. The inability to photoreduce A1 in reaction centers lacking a functional center X may result from alteration of the reaction center tertiary structure by the urea-ferricyanide treatment or from displacement of A1 from its binding site.  相似文献   

7.
The light-induced electron spin resonance signals of Photosystem I spinach subchloroplast particles have been studied at approximately 6 °K. Using the technique of flash photolysis-electron spin resonance with actinic illumination at 647 nm, a kinetic analysis of the previously observed bound ferredoxin ESR signals was carried out. Signal I (P700+) exhibits a partial light-reversible behavior at 6 °K so it was expected that if the bound ferredoxin is the primary acceptor of Photosystem I, it should also exhibit a partial reversible behavior. However, none of the bound ferredoxin ESR signals showed any such light reversible behavior. A search to wider fields revealed two components which did exhibit the expected kinetic behavior. These components are very broad (about 80 G) and are centered at g = 1.75 and g = 2.07. These two components exhibit the expected characteristics of the primary electron acceptor. A model is presented to account for the reversible and irreversible photochemical changes in Photosystem I. The possible identity of the primary acceptor responsible for these two new components, is discussed in terms of the available information. The primary acceptor may be an iron-sulfur protein, but not of the type characteristic of the bound or water-soluble ferredoxins found so far in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

8.
The iron metabolism was studied in serum blood samples collected from 26 professional sportsmen undergoing intensive physical exercises using EPR combined with hematological and biochemical laboratory tests. Only 23% of EPR spectra (n = 6) were practically normal while in the rest spectra additional abnormal absorption lines were detected. Presumably, the significant portion of new signals may be caused by different cytochromes. Moreover, the anisotropic signals with g 1 ? 2.02; g 2 ? 1.94 and g 3 ? 1.86 registered in some spectra pointed to the sulfur-iron centers. There was nearly linear correlation between the concentration of Fe3+ in transferrin (Fe3+-Tf) obtained from the EPR spectra and the serum iron concentration measured by absorption photometry both for sportsmen and controls (healthy individuals and patients with different diseases). At equal serum iron concentrations the Fe3+-Tf level was higher in sportsmen than that in controls. The Pearson correlation coefficient (r) for Fe3+-Tf and serum iron values was equal to 0.89 in sportsmen versus r = 0.97 in controls. Additional new lines in serum EPR spectra of professional sportsmen prove the suitability of EPR assay for scheduled medical exams since routine biochemical and hematological tests are insufficient to discover all abnormalities in iron metabolism under intensive physical exercises.  相似文献   

9.
Purified spinach nitrite reductase, a protein that contains siroheme, is characterized by absorption maxima in the visible region at 385 and 573 nm. On addition of the substrate nitrite, the bands shift to 360 and 570 nm. Dithionite also causes shifts in the maxima of the visible absorption region. Electron paramagnetic resonance studies show that the untreated enzyme contains a high-spin Fe3+ heme and that the addition of cyanide, an inhibitor that is competitive with nitrite, results in a spin-state change of the heme. Electron paramagnetic resonance analysis of the enzyme in the presence of dithionite or dithionite plus cyanide indicates the presence of a reduced iron-sulfur center with rhombic symmetry (g-values of 2.03, 1.94, and 1.91). In contrast, when the enzyme is treated with dithionite plus nitrite, the EPR spectrum of an NO-heme complex (g-values of 2.07 and 2.00) is observed. The presence of an iron-sulfur center has also been confirmed by chemical analyses of the nonheme iron and acid-labile sulfide in nitrite reductase. These results are discussed in terms of a mechanism for nitrite reduction that involves electron transfer between the iron-sulfur center and siroheme.  相似文献   

10.
Chromatophores from the photosynthetic bacterium, Chromatium vinosum, have been prepared which photoreduce NAD+ with either succinate or reduced dichlorophenolindophenol as electron donors. NAD+ reduction is inhibited by uncouplers as well as inhibitors of cyclic photophosphorylation. These chromatophores contain several bound iron-sulfur centers which have been detected by low-temperature EPR spectroscopy. One center, having a g 2.01 EPR signal in the oxidized state, has Em7.5 = +50 mV and is partially reduced by succinate in the dark. Three iron-sulfur centers having g 1.93 EPR signals have been resolved by redox titration, and the Em7.5 values of these centers are ?50, ?175 and ?250 mV, respectively. Studies of the involvement of these centers in electron transfer from donors to NAD+ have indicated that the center with Em = ?50 mV is succinate reducible in the dark and appears to be analogous to center S-1 of succinic dehydrogenase in other systems. An additional g 1.93 iron-sulfur center can be photoreduced in the presence of electron donors and this reduction is inhibited by uncouplers. The possible role of the two low-potential iron-sulfur centers in relation to the dehydrogenases functioning in NAD+ reduction is considered.  相似文献   

11.
Recoil-free measurements were carried out on a 2 Fe-ferredoxin, which was isolated and purified from an extreme halophile, Halobacterium of the Dead Sea. The spectrum of this ferredoxin in the oxidized state at 82 K is a superposition of two quadrupole doublets, representing two non-equivalent Fe3+ sites of equal intensity. The spectrum of the reduced ferredoxin is consistent with the presence of two pure classes of iron atoms, ferric (lower isomer shift) and ferrous (higher isomer shift). Interpretations of the recoil-free spectra are discussed. Mössbauer measurements were also carried out on frozen whole bacterial cells and the resulting spectrum was found to be quite different from that observed in the isolated ferredoxin. Tentative conclusions are reached concerning the localization of this ferredoxin in the cytosol of the Halobacteria.The EPR spectrum of the reduced ferredoxin obtained at 24 K exhibits rhombic symmetry with the following g values: 1.894, 1.984 and 2.07. These values are similar to those obtained with 2 Fe-ferredoxins of the plant type, except that the g y and g z values are somewhat higher. Both from the EPR and Mössbauer data, it is deduced that the spin relaxation times in reduced halophilic ferredoxins are faster than in the reduced plant ferredoxins.  相似文献   

12.
An air-stable formate dehydrogenase, an enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of formate to CO2, was purified from a sulfate-reducing organism, Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774. The enzyme has a molecular mass of approximately 150?kDa (three different subunits: 88, 29 and 16?kDa) and contains three types of redox-active centers: four c-type hemes, nonheme iron arranged as two [4Fe-4S]2+/1+ centers and a molybdenum-pterin site. Selenium was also chemically detected. The enzyme specific activity is 78 units per mg of protein. Mo(V) EPR signals were observed in the native, reduced and formate-reacted states. EPR signals related to the presence of multiple low-spin hemes were also observed in the oxidized state. Upon reduction, an examination of the EPR data under appropriate conditions distinguishes two types of iron-sulfur centers, an [Fe-S] center I (g max=2.050, g med=1.947, g min=1.896) and an [Fe-S] center II (g max=2.071, g med=1.926, g min=1.865). Mössbauer spectroscopy confirmed the presence of four hemes in the low-spin state. The presence of two [4Fe-4S]2+/1+ centers was confirmed, one of these displaying very small hyperfine coupling constants in the +1 oxidation state. The midpoint redox potentials of the enzyme metal centers were also estimated.  相似文献   

13.
Richard Malkin 《BBA》1984,764(1):63-69
Modification of chloroplast membranes with diazonium benzene sulfonate (DABS) leads to a loss of Photosystem I-dependent ferredoxin reduction but not methyl viologen reduction. EPR studies of DABS-modified membranes show no inhibition of P-700+ formation at cryogenic temperatures, but iron-sulfur Center A photoreduction is markedly inhibited. Iron-sulfur Center B photoreduction at physiological temperatures in DABS-modified membranes is also markedly inhibited and little Center B can be detected after dark chemical reduction. These results indicate DABS specifically modifies iron-sulfur Center B of the spinach chloroplast Photosystem I electron acceptor complex and that Center B is obligately required for the reduction of Center A at cryogenic temperatures. Possible electron transport pathways at physiological temperatures are also considered.  相似文献   

14.
Type I reaction centers (RCs) are multisubunit chlorophyll-protein complexes that function in photosynthetic organisms to convert photons to Gibbs free energy. The unique feature of Type I RCs is the presence of iron-sulfur clusters as electron transfer cofactors. Photosystem I (PS I) of oxygenic phototrophs is the best-studied Type I RC. It is comprised of an interpolypeptide [4Fe-4S] cluster, F(X), that bridges the PsaA and PsaB subunits, and two terminal [4Fe-4S] clusters, F(A) and F(B), that are bound to the PsaC subunit. In this review, we provide an update on the structure and function of the bound iron-sulfur clusters in Type I RCs. The first new development in this area is the identification of F(A) as the cluster proximal to F(X) and the resolution of the electron transfer sequence as F(X)-->F(A)-->F(B)-->soluble ferredoxin. The second new development is the determination of the three-dimensional NMR solution structure of unbound PsaC and localization of the equal- and mixed-valence pairs in F(A)(-) and F(B)(-). We provide a survey of the EPR properties and spectra of the iron-sulfur clusters in Type I RCs of cyanobacteria, green sulfur bacteria, and heliobacteria, and we summarize new information about the kinetics of back-reactions involving the iron-sulfur clusters.  相似文献   

15.
John L. Casey  Kenneth Sauer 《BBA》1984,767(1):21-28
In Photosystem II preparations at low temperature we were able to generate and trap an intermediate state between the S1 and S2 states of the Kok scheme for photosynthetic oxygen evolution. Illumination of dark-adapted, oxygen-evolving Photosystem II preparations at 140 K produces a 320-G-wide EPR signal centered near g = 4.1 when observed at 10 K. This signal is superimposed on a 5-fold larger and somewhat narrower background signal; hence, it is best observed in difference spectra. Warming of illuminated samples to 190 K in the dark results in the disappearance of the light-induced g = 4.1 feature and the appearance of the multiline EPR signal associated with the S2 state. Low-temperature illumination of samples prepared in the S2 state does not produce the g = 4.1 signal. Inhibition of oxygen evolution by incubation of PS II preparations in 0.8 M NaCl buffer or by the addition of 400 μM NH2OH prevents the formation of the g = 4.1 signal. Samples in which oxygen evolution is inhibited by replacement of Cl? with F? exhibit the g = 4.1 signal when illuminated at 140 K, but subsequent warming to 190 K neither depletes the amplitude of this signal nor produces the multiline signal. The broad signal at g = 4.1 is typical for a S = 52 spin system in a rhombic environment, suggesting the involvement of non-heme Fe in photosynthetic oxygen evolution.  相似文献   

16.
Soluble ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) from Nitrosomonas europaea was purified to homogeneity and metals in the active sites of the enzyme (Cu, Fe) were analyzed by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. EPR spectra were obtained for a type 2 Cu(II) site with g|| = 2.24, A|| = 18.4 mT and g = 2.057 as well as for heme and non heme iron present in purified soluble AMO from N. europaea. A second type 2 Cu(II) EPR signal with g|| = 2.29, A|| = 16.1 mT and g = 2.03 appeared in the spectrum of the ferricyanide oxidized enzyme and was attributed to oxidation of cuprous sites. Comparison of EPR-detectable Cu2+ with total copper determined by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) suggests that there are six paramagnetic Cu2+ and three diamagnetic Cu1+ per heterotrimeric soluble AMO (two paramagnetic and one diamagnetic Cu per αβγ-protomer). A trigonal EPR signal at g = 6.01, caused by a high-spin iron, indicative for cytochrome bound iron, and a rhombic signal at g = 4.31, characteristic of specifically bound Fe3+ was detectable. The binding of nitric oxide in the presence of reductant resulted in a ferrous S = 3/2 signal, characteristic of a ferrous nitrosyl complex. Inactivation of soluble AMO with acetylene did neither diminish the ferrous signal nor the intensity of the Cu2+-EPR signal.  相似文献   

17.
Alan J. Bearden  Richard Malkin 《BBA》1972,283(3):456-468
Quantitative electron paramagnetic resonance studies of the primary event associated with Photosystem I in chloroplasts have been carried out at 25 °K. After illumination of either whole chloroplasts or Photosystem I subchloroplast fragments (D-144) with 715-nm actinic light at 25 °K, equal spin concentrations of oxidized P700 and reduced bound iron-sulfur protein (bound ferredoxin) have been measured. Quantitative determination of the concentration of these two carriers by EPR spectroscopy after illumination at low temperature indicates that Photosystem I fragments are enriched in P700 and the bound iron-sulfur protein as compared with unfractionated chloroplasts. These results indicate that P700 and the bound iron-sulfur protein function as the donor-acceptor complex of chloroplast Photosystem I.  相似文献   

18.
19.
A newly purified Photosystem (PS) I particle is described, with still active iron-sulfur acceptors: A, B and X. Apart from the apoprotein of P700, 3 other main polypeptides of this particle are located at 20, 17 and 10 kDa, and two minor ones are detectable at 16.5 and 8 kDa. Both in vivo 35S labeling and carboxymethylation with iodo[14C]acetate show that most of the cysteine residues are located in the 8-kDa band. The amino acid composition of this band reveals important common features with small iron-sulfur proteins of the ferredoxin type.  相似文献   

20.
The coupling constants J between the iron atoms in ferredoxin type iron-sulfur proteins containing binuclear clusters were evaluated by two parallel methods. The temperature dependence of the EPR linewidths and integrated abosrption intensities are both related to the energy of the first excited state. The values of J obtained were: center S-1 in succinate dehydrogenase, 90 cm-1; Rieske's iron-sulfur center, 65 cm-1; adrenodoxin, 270 cm-1. The behavior of iron-sulfur center N-1a in NADH:UQ reductase was also examined; its similarity to that of center S-1 indicates that center N-1a is also a binuclear iron-sulfur center, with J = 90 cm-1. Greater rhombic distortion present in the EPR spectrum of a binuclear cluster was associated with smaller values of J.  相似文献   

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