首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The Q cycle mechanism of thebc 1 complex requires two quinone reaction centers, the hydroquinone oxidation (QP) and the quinone reduction (QN) center. These sites can be distinguished by the specific binding of inhibitors to either of them. A substantial body of information about the hydroquinone oxidation site has been provided by the analysis of the binding of QP site inhibitors to thebc 1 complex in different redox states and to preparations depleted of lipid or protein components as well as by functional studies with mutantbc 1 complexes selected for resistance toward the inhibitors. The reaction site is formed by at least five protein segments of cytochromeb and parts of the iron-sulfur protein. At least two different binding sites for QP site inhibitors could be detected, one for the methoxyacrylate-type inhibitors binding predominantly to cytochromeb, the other for the chromone-type inhibitors and hydroxyquinones binding predominantly to the iron-sulfur protein. The interactions with the protein segments, between different protein segments, and between protein and ligands (substrate, inhibitors) are discussed in detail and a working model of the QP pocket is proposed.  相似文献   

2.
Fluorescence induction curves of purple bacteria (Rs. rubrum, Rps. viridis and Rb. capsulatus) were measured in the sub-millisecond time range employing a xenon flash technique. The induction curves of all three species displayed a sigmoidal shape. Analysis of the curves showed that none of the species examined had an antenna organization of a lake (i.e. unrestricted energy transfer between photosynthetic units). The apparent time constants of inter-unit exciton transfer were estimated to be approximately 24 ps in the case of LHC 1-containing species (Rs. rubrum and Rps. viridis) and 40 ps in the case of the LHC 2-containing species Rb. capsulatus. This result demonstrates that LHC 2 (B800–850) acts as a sort of insulator between photosynthetic units. Assuming a coordination number of 6 in the LHC 1-containing species the mean single step energy transfer time between adjacent LHC 1 can be estimated to be 4–5 ps. This is not perfectly compatible with the much faster Förster transfer rate of <1ps that follows from the minimal chromophore-chromophore distances estimated from digital image processing of micrographs from stained membranes. It thus may be concluded that the photosynthetic units (reaction center plus LHC 1) are loosely arranged in the photosynthetic membrane, like in the fluid-mosaic-membrane model, rather than in a hexagonally crystalline configuration.Abbreviations A antenna pigment - APD avalanche photodiode - LHC 1 light-harvesting complex 1 of purple bacteria - LHC 2 light-harvesting complex 2 of purple bacteria - P primary donor - PSU photosynthetic unit - QA first quinone acceptor - RC reaction center  相似文献   

3.
In this article, the three-dimensional structures of photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) are presented mainly on the basis of the X-ray crystal structures of the RCs from the purple bacteria Rhodopseudomonas (Rp.) viridis and Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides. In contrast to earlier comparisons and on the basis of the best-defined Rb. sphaeroides structure, a number of the reported differences between the structures cannot be confirmed. However, there are small conformational differences which might provide a basis for the explanation of observed spectral and functional discrepancies between the two species.A particular focus in this review is on the binding site of the secondary quinone (QB), where electron transfer is coupled to the uptake of protons from the cytoplasm. For the discussion of the QB site, a number of newlydetermined coordinate sets of Rp. viridis RCs modified at the QB site have been included. In addition, chains of ordered water molecules are found leading from the cytoplasm to the QB site in the best-defined structures of both Rp. viridis and Rb. sphaeroides RCs.Abbreviations BA accessory bacteriochlorophyll in the active branch - BB accessory bacteriochlorophyll in the inactive branch - D primary electron donor (special pair) - DL special pair bacteriochorophyll bound by the L subunit - DM special pair bacteriochorophyll bound by the M subunit - QA primary electron acceptor quinone - QB secondary electron acceptor quinone - RC reaction center - Rb. Rhodobacter - Rp. Rhodopseudomonas - A bacteriopheophytin in the active branch - B bacteriopheophytin in the inactive branch  相似文献   

4.
The effects of various sulfhydryl-modifying reagents on reaction centers (RCs) from purple photosynthetic bacteria have been examined, with particular emphasis on the activity of the acceptor quinones, QA and QB, comprising the two electron gate. Mercurial reagents, especially p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonate (pCMBS), were effective in inhibiting QB function in RCs from Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rb. capsulatus, but not in Rhodopseudomonas viridis. The inhibition was fully reversible by dialysis against dithiothreitol (DTT). The effect on QB function was not an apparent one mediated by an alteration in the redox potential of QA. N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) had no effect on any of the quinone functions, even at very high concentrations. Comparison of the X-ray structures of the RCs from Rb. sphaeroides and Rp. viridis and the known amino acid sequences for all three bacterial RCs suggest that a cysteine residue at position 108 in the L subunit of the Rhodobacter species is the most likely candidate for the site of action of the mercurial reagents. This was strongly supported by the absence of any effect of pCMBS on a site specific mutation of Rb. sphaeroides (L108CS) with residue L108 changed from cysteine to serine. These results imply a long distance (>20 Å) effect on the functioning of QB, perhaps involving a relatively gross structural alteration.  相似文献   

5.
The reduction by sulfide of exogenous ubiquinone is compared to the reduction of cytochromes in chromatophores of Rhodobacter capsulatus. From titrations with sulfide values for Vmax of 300 and 10 moles reduced/mg bacteriochlorophyll a·h, and for Km of 5 and 3 M were estimated, for decyl-ubiquinone-and cytochrome c-reduction, respectively. Both reactions are sensitive to KCN, as has been found for sulfide-quinone reductase (SQR) in Oscillatoria limnetica, which is a flavoprotein. Effects of inhibitors interfering with quinone binding sites suggest that at least part of the electron transport from sulfide in R. capsulatus employs the cytochrome bc 1-complex via the ubiquinone pool.Abbreviations BChl a bacteriochlorophyll a - DAD diaminodurene - decyl-UQ decyl-ubiquinone - LED light emitting diode - NQNO 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide - PQ-1 plastoquinone 1 - SQR sulfide-quinone reductase (E.C. 1.8.5.'.) - UQ ubiquinone 10 - Qc the quinone reduction site on the cytochrome b 6 f/bc 1, complex (also termed Qi or Qr or Qn) - Qs the quinone reduction site on SQR - Qz quinol oxidation site on the b 6 f/bc 1, complex (also termed Qo or Qp)  相似文献   

6.
Two acidic residues, L212Glu and L213Asp, in the QB binding sites of the photosynthetic reaction centers of Rhodobacter capsulatus and Rhodobacter sphaeroides are thought to play central roles in the transfer of protons to the quinone anion(s) generated by photoinduced electron transfer. We constructed the site-specific double mutant L212Ala-L213Ala in R. capsulatus, that is incapable of growth under photosynthetic conditions. A photocompetent derivative of that strain has been isolated that carries the original L212Ala-L213Ala double mutation and a second-site suppressor mutation at residue M43 (AsnAsp), outside of the QB binding site, that is solely responsible for restoring the photosynthetic phenotype. The Asp,Asn combination of residues at the L213 and M43 positions is conserved in the five species of photosynthetic bacteria whose reaction center sequences are known. In R. capsulatus and R. sphaeroides, the pair is L213Asp-M43Asn. But, the reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas viridis, Rhodospirillum rubrum and Chloroflexus aurantiacus reverse the combination to L213Asn-M43Asp. In this respect, the QB site of the suppressor strain resembles that of the latter three species in that it couples an uncharged residue at L213 with an acidic residue at M43. These reaction centers, in which L213 is an amide, must employ an alternative proton transfer pathway. The observation that the M43AsnAsp mutation in R. capsulatus compensates for the loss of both acidic residues at L212 and L213 suggests that M43Asp is involved in a new proton transfer route in this species that resembles the one normally used in reaction centers of Rps. virddis, Rsp. rubrum and C. aurantiacus.  相似文献   

7.
《BBA》1987,892(3):275-283
Electron-transfer reactions and triplet decay rates have been studied at pressures up to 300 MPa. In reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26, high pressure hastened the electron transfers from both the primary and secondary quinones (QA and QB) to the primary electron donor bacteriochlorophyll, P. Motion of QA between two sites, one nearer to P and the other nearer to QB, could account for these pressure effects. In reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas viridis, charge recombination was slowed by high pressure. Decay rates were also studied for the triplet state, PR. In Rb. sphaeroides R-26 with QA reduced with Na2S2O4, the decay was hastened by pressure. This could be explained if PR decays through a charge-transfer triplet state, or if the decay kinetics of PR are sensitive to the distance between P and QA. In Rps. viridis reaction centers, and in Rb. sphaeroides reaction centers that were depleted of QA, the lifetime of PR was not altered by pressure.  相似文献   

8.
Ozkan  S. 《Photosynthetica》2002,40(1):71-75
In Rhodobacter capsulatus, two triple mutants were constructed. In these non-photosynthetic mutants, two amino acids near the quinone QB have been mutated to two alanines: in the QA site have been mutated to alanine-aspartic acid and glutamic acid-alanine. Several spontaneous mutants derived from original constructs were selected. DNA sequencing experiments on originally designed mutant strains and their spontaneous mutants were performed to identify possible genetic reversions at quinone site-specific locations. Constructed mutants carry double alanines in the QB site and single alanine in the QA site. Spontaneous mutants carry additional compensating mutations, aspartic acid (L225), cysteine (M231), and serine (M231) far from QA and QB sites, which may be involved in quinone binding by the photosynthetic reaction centres.  相似文献   

9.
In this paper we report studies on photosynthetic formation of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) in three phototrophic bacteria. Formation of PPi was found in chromatophores from Rhodopseudomonas viridis but not in chromatophores from Rhodopseudomonas blastica and Rhodobacter capsulatus. The maximal rate of PPi synthesis in Rps. viridis was 0.15 mol PPi formed/(min*mol Bacteriochlorophyll) at 23°C. The synthesis of PPi was inhibited by electron transport inhibitors, uncouplers and fluoride, but was insensitive to oligomycin and venturicidin. The steady state rate of PPi synthesis under continuous illumination was about 15% of the steady-state rate of ATP synthesis. The synthesis of PPi after short light flashes was also studied. The yield of PPi after a single 1 ms flash was equivalent to approximately 1 mol PPi/500 mol Bacteriochlorophyll. In Rps. viridis chromatophores, PPi was also found to induce a membrane potential, which was sensitive to carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone and NaF.Abbreviations BChl Bacteriochlorophyll - F0F1-ATPase Membrane bound proton translocating ATP synthase - FCCP Carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone - H+-PPase Membrane bound proton translocating PPi synthase - TPP+ Tetraphenyl phosphonium ion - TPB- Tetraphenyl boron ion - Transmembrane electrical potential difference  相似文献   

10.
There are now four structures of vertebrate mitochondrial bc 1 complexes available in theprotein databases and structures from yeast and bacterial sources are expected soon. Thisreview summarizes the new information with emphasis on the avian cytochrome bc 1 complex(PDB entries 1BCC and 3BCC). The Rieske iron–sulfur protein is mobile and this has beenproposed to be important for catalysis. The binding sites for quinone have been located basedon structures containing inhibitors and, in the case of the quinone reduction site Qi, thequinone itself.  相似文献   

11.
A proton electrochemical potential across the membranes of photosynthetic purple bacteria is established by a light-driven proton pump mechanism: the absorbed light in the reaction center initiates electron transfer which is coupled to the vectorial displacement of protons from the cytoplasm to the periplasm. The stoichiometry and kinetics of proton binding and release can be tracked directly by electric (glass electrodes), spectrophotometric (pH indicator dyes) and conductimetric techniques. The primary step in the formation of the transmembrane chemiosmotic potential is the uptake of two protons by the doubly reduced secondary quinone in the reaction center and the subsequent exchange of hydroquinol for quinone from the membrane quinone-pool. However, the proton binding associated with singly reduced promary and/or secondary quinones of the reaction center is substoichiometric, pH-dependent and its rate is electrostatically enhanced but not diffusion limited. Molecular details of protonation are discussed based on the crystallographic structure of the reaction center of purple bacteriaRb. sphaeroides andRps. viridis, structure-based molecular (electrostatic) calculations and mutagenesis directed at protonatable amino acids supposed to be involved in proton conduction pathways.  相似文献   

12.
A method to determine photosynthetic electron transport in thylakoid membranes is described for Gossypium barbadense (cv. Pima S-7) and G. hirsutum (cv. DP 5415). These cultivars differed markedly in tolerance to prometryn, a PS II inhibitor. The rates of photosynthetic electron transport obtained were 245 mole oxygen mg–1 chl h1. Plant age and leaf size influenced the activity of the thylakoid preparations. Thylakoids from leaves of plants 24 to 37 d and 50–70 mm in diameter had the highest activities; thylakoids from cotyledons, fully expanded leaves and young leaves had low activity. Thylakoids from both species had similar photosynthetic activities and I50's for prometryn, atrazine and diuron. Thus, tolerance to prometryn was not due to differential binding at D1 protein.Abbreviations PSII photosystem II - DAP day after planting - DQ duroquinone - DBMIB dibromothymoquinone - DMBQ 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone - I50 concentration to inhibit reaction by 50% - QA quinone A - QB quinone B  相似文献   

13.
Inhibition of electron transport and damage to the protein subunits by ultraviolet-B (UV-B, 280–320 nm) radiation have been studied in isolated reaction centers of the non-sulfur purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26. UV-B irradiation results in the inhibition of charge separation as detected by the loss of the initial amplitude of absorbance change at 430 nm reflecting the formation of the P+(QAQB) state. In addition to this effect, the charge recombination accelerates and the damping of the semiquinone oscillation increases in the UV-B irradiated reaction centers. A further effect of UV-B is a 2 fold increase in the half- inhibitory concentration of o-phenanthroline. Some damage to the protein subunits of the RC is also observed as a consequence of UV-B irradiation. This effect is manifested as loss of the L, M and H subunits on Coomassie stained gels, but not accompanied with specific degradation products. The damaging effects of UV-B radiation enhanced in reaction centers where the quinone was semireduced (QB ) during UV-B irradiation, but decreased in reaction centers which lacked quinone at the QB binding site. In comparison with Photosystem II of green plant photosynthesis, the bacterial reaction center shows about 40 times lower sensitivity to UV-B radiation concerning the activity loss and 10 times lower sensitivity concerning the extent of reaction center protein damage. It is concluded that the main effect of UV-B radiation in the purple bacterial reaction center occurs at the QAQB quinone acceptor complex by decreasing the binding affinity of QB and shifting the electron equilibration from QAQB to QA QB. The inhibitory effect is likely to be caused by modification of the protein environment around the QB binding pocket and mediated by the semiquinone form of QB. The UV-resistance of the bacterial reaction center compared to Photosystem II indicates that either the QAQB acceptor complex, which is present in both types of reaction centers with similar structure and function, is much less susceptible to UV damage in purple bacteria, or, more likely, that Photosystem II contains UV-B targets which are more sensitive than its quinone complex.Abbreviations Bchl bacteriochlorophyll - P Bchl dimer - QA primary quinone electron acceptor - QB secondary quinone electron acceptor - RC reaction center - UV-B ultraviolet-B  相似文献   

14.
《FEBS letters》1987,221(2):221-225
Comparison of the Stark effect on the Qy transitions of the pigments in reaction centers of Rb. sphaeroides and Rps. viridis at 77 K shows great similarity in the long-wavelength absorption of the bacteriochlorophyll dimer but differs significantly in the absorption region of the accessory bacteriochlorophylls and bacteriopheophytins.  相似文献   

15.
The orientation ofRhodobacter sphaeroides reaction center complexes (RC complexes) in proteoliposomal membranes was investigated by a direct electrometric method. Conditions were found that allow monitoring of only that RC complex fraction that is oriented with its donor side to the inner part of the proteoliposome. It is shown thato-phenanthroline, an inhibitor of electron transfer between primary (QA) and secondary (QB) quinone acceptors, can also inhibit the photoinduced QA reduction. The efficiency of this inhibition depends on the concentration of added ubiquinone. It is assumed that the laser flash-inducedo-phenanthroline inhibition of primary dipole (P-870+ · Q A ) formation is of a competitive nature.  相似文献   

16.
David M. Tiede  P.L. Dutton 《BBA》1981,637(2):278-290
The orientation of the reaction center bacteriochlorophyll dimer, (BChl)2, and primary quinone, QI, has been studied by EPR in chromatophores of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides R26 and Chromatium vinosum and in the reconstituted membrane multilayers of the isolated Rps. sphaeroides reaction center protein. The similarity in the angular dependence of the (BChl)2 triplet and QI?Fe2+ signals in the chromatophore and reconstituted reaction center membrane multilayers indicates that the reaction center is similarly oriented in both native and model membranes. The principle magnetic axes of the (BChl)2 triplet are found to lie with the x direction approximately parallel to the plane of the membrane surface, and the z and y directions approx. 10–20° away from the plane of the membrane surface and membrane normal, respectively. The QI?Fe2+ signals are found to have the g 1.82 component positioned perpendicular to the plane of the membrane surface, with an orthogonal low-field transition (at g 1.68 in Rps. Sphaeroides and at g 1.62 in C. vinosum) lying parallel to the plane of the membrane surface. The orientation of QI was determined by the angular dependence of this signal in Fe2+-depleted reaction center reconstituted membrane multilayers, and it was found to be situated most likely with the plane of the quinone ring perpendicular to the plane of the membrane surface.  相似文献   

17.
Quinone and inhibitor binding to Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides (R-26 and GA) reaction centers were studied using spectroscopic methods and by direct adsorption of reaction centers onto anion exchange filters in the presence of 14C-labelled quinone or inhibitor. These measurements show that as secondary acceptor, QB, ubiquinone (UQ) is tightly bound in the semiquinone form and loosely bound in the quinone and quinol forms. The quinol is probably more loosely bound than the quinone. o-Phenanthroline and terbutryn, a triazine inhibitor, compete with UQ and with each other for binding to the reaction center. Inhibition by o-phenanthroline of electron transfer from the primary to the secondary quinone acceptor (QA to QB) occurs via displacement of UQ from the QB binding site. Displacement of UQ by terbutryn is apparently accessory to the inhibition of electron transfer. Terbutryn binding is lowered by reduction of QB to Q?B but is practically unaffected by reduction of QA to Q?A in the absence of QB. UQ-9 and UQ-10 have a 5- to 6-fold higher binding affinity to the QB site than does UQ-1, indicating that the long isoprenoid chain facilitates the binding to the QB site.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) on electron transfer in the acceptor quinone complex of reaction centers (RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides is reported. DCCD covalently labelled the RC over a wide concentration range. At low concentrations (<10 M) the binding was specific for the L subunit. At relatively high concentrations (>100 M) DCCD accelerated the rate of charge recombination of the P+QB - state, consistent with a decrease in the equilibrium constant between QA -QB and QAQB -. At similar concentrations, in the presence of cytochrome c as exogenous donor, turnover of the RC was inhibited such that only three cytochromes were oxidized in a train of flashes. Both these inhibitory effects were fully reversed by dialysis, indicating that stable covalent binding was not involved. Possible mechanisms of action are discussed in terms of the putative role of specific residues in proton transfer and protonation and release of quinol from the RC.  相似文献   

19.
A subunit complex was formed from the core light-harvesting complex (LH1) of bacteriochlorophyll(BChl)-b-containing Rhodopseudomonas viridis. The addition of octyl glucoside to a carotenoid-depleted Rps. viridis membrane preparation resulted in a subunit complex absorbing at 895 nm, which could be quantitatively dissociated to free BChl b and then reassociated to the subunit. When carotenoid was added back, the subunit could be reassociated to LH1 with a 25% yield. Additionally, the Rps. viridis - and -polypeptides were isolated, purified, and then reconstituted with BChl b. They formed a subunit absorbing near 895 nm, similar to the subunit formed by titration of the carotenoid depleted membrane, but did not form an LH1-type complex at 1015 nm. The same results were obtained with the -polypeptide alone and BChl b. Isolated polypeptides were also tested for their interaction with BChl a. They formed subunit and LH1-type complexes similar to those formed using polypeptides isolated from BChl-a-containing bacteria but displayed 6–10 nm smaller red shifts in their long-wavelength absorption maxima. Thus, the larger red shift of BChl-b-containing Rps. viridis is not attributable solely to the protein structure. The -polypeptide of Rps. viridis differed from the other -polypeptides tested in that it could form an LH1-type complex with BChl a in the absence of the - and -polypeptides. It apparently contains the necessary information required to assemble into an LH1-type complex. When the -polypeptide was tested in reconstitution with BChl a and BChl b with the - and -polypeptides, it had no effect; its role remains undetermined.Abbreviations B820 the subunit form of the core light-harvesting complex in BChl-a-containing bacteria which has an absorption maximum at or near 820 nm - B875 the core light-harvesting complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides which has an absorption maximum at 875 nm - B881 the core light-harvesting complex of wild-type Rhodospirillum rubrum which has an absorption maximum at 881 nm - B895 the subunit form of the core light-harvesting complex in Rps. viridis which has an absorption maximum near 888–895 nm - B1015 the core light-harvesting complex of Rps. viridis which has an absorption maximum at 1015 nm - CD circular dichroism - LH1 the core light-harvesting complex - OG n-octyl -d-glucopyranoside  相似文献   

20.
Cytochrome bo3 is the major respiratory oxidase located in the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli when grown under high oxygen tension. The enzyme catalyzes the 2-electron oxidation of ubiquinol-8 and the 4-electron reduction of dioxygen to water. When solubilized and isolated using dodecylmaltoside, the enzyme contains one equivalent of ubiquinone-8, bound at a high affinity site (QH). The quinone bound at the QH site can form a stable semiquinone, and the amino acid residues which hydrogen bond to the semiquinone have been identified. In the current work, it is shown that the tightly bound ubiquinone-8 at the QH site is not displaced by ubiquinol-1 even during enzyme turnover. Furthermore, the presence of high affinity inhibitors, HQNO and aurachin C1–10, does not displace ubiquinone-8 from the QH site. The data clearly support the existence of a second binding site for ubiquinone, the QL site, which can rapidly exchange with the substrate pool. HQNO is shown to bind to a single site on the enzyme and to prevent formation of the stable ubisemiquinone, though without displacing the bound quinone. Inhibition of the steady state kinetics of the enzyme indicates that aurachin C1–10 may compete for binding with quinol at the QL site while, at the same time, preventing formation of the ubisemiquinone at the QH site. It is suggested that the two quinone binding sites may be adjacent to each other or partially overlap.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号