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1.
Light-induced forward electron transfer in the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center from Rhodobacter sphaeroides was investigated by time-resolved infrared spectroscopy. Using a highly sensitive kinetic photometer based on a tunable IR diode laser source [M?ntele, W., Hienerwadel, R., Lenz, F., Riedel, W. J., Grisar, R., & Tacke, M. (1990a) Spectrosc. Int. 2, 29-35], molecular processes concomitant with electron-transfer reactions were studied in the microsecond-to-second time scale. Infrared (IR) signals in the 1780-1430-cm-1 spectral region, appearing within the instrument time resolution of about 0.5 microseconds, could be assigned to molecular changes of the primary electron donor upon formation of a radical cation and to modes of the primary quinone electron acceptor QA and its environment upon formation of QA-. These IR signals are consistent with steady-state FTIR difference spectra of the P+Q- formation [M?ntele, W., Nabedryk, E., Tavitian, B. A., Kreutz, W., & Breton, J. (1985) FEBS Lett. 187, 227-232; M?ntele, W., Wollenweber, A., Nabedryk, E., & Breton, J. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 8468-8472; Nabedryk, E., Bagley, K. A., Thibodeau, D. L., Bauscher, M., M?ntele, W., & Breton, J. (1990) FEBS Lett. 266, 59-62] and with time-resolved FTIR studies [Thibodeau, D. L., Nabedryk, E., Hienerwadel, R., Lenz, F., M?ntele, W., & Breton, J. (1990) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1020, 253-259]. At given wavenumbers, kinetic components with a half-time of approximately 120 microseconds were observed and attributed to QA----QB electron transfer. The time-resolved IR signals, in contrast to steady-state experiments where full protein relaxation after electron transfer can occur, allow us to follow directly the modes of QA and QB and their protein environment under conditions of forward electron transfer. Apart from signals attributed to the primary electron donor, signals are proposed to arise not only from the C = O and C = C vibrational modes of the neutral quinones and from the C-O and C-C vibrations of their semiquinone anion form but also from amino acid groups forming their binding sites. Some of the signals appearing with the instrument rise time as well as the transient 120-microseconds signals are interpreted in terms of binding and interaction of the primary and secondary quinone electron acceptor in the Rb. sphaeroides reaction center and of the conformational changes in their binding site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The factors governing quinone protein binding in the photosynthetic bacterium Rps. viridis are investigated via use of empirical intermolecular energy calculations using the GRID method (PJ Goodford (1985) J Med Chem 28: 849–854). A probe atom corresponding to a carbonyl oxygen atom is used to investigate regions exhibiting preference for carbonyl binding in the QA and QB sites of Rps. viridis. Two distinct regions at the top and bottom of the sites are revealed to be most favourable for carbonyl binding. Overlay of the crystallographically determined positions for the quinone carbonyl groups shows that they lie within the regions predicted theoretically. The method is also shown to be able to give qualitative insight into the affect of amino acid mutations of quinone binding.  相似文献   

3.
Ginet N  Lavergne J 《Biochemistry》2001,40(9):2995-3001
Inhibitors which block electron transfer from the primary (Q(A)) to the secondary (Q(B)) quinone of the bacterial reaction center are competing with the pool ubiquinones for binding at the Q(B) pocket. Due to the much greater stability of the semiquinone state Q(B)(-) compared with fully oxidized or reduced quinone, a displacement of the inhibitors takes place after one flash from state Q(A)(-)I to state Q(A)Q(B)(-). This process can be monitored from near-IR absorption changes which reflect local absorption shifts specific to Q(A)(-) and Q(B)(-). An anomalous behavior was observed when using triazines in chromatophores of R. capsulatus: the IR absorption change reflecting the formation of Q(B)(-) after one flash was absent. A normal transient decay of this signal was, however, triggered by a second flash, followed by a rapid return to the baseline. We show that this phenomenon is due to an absorption change induced by inhibitor binding (thus present in the dark baseline), with a spectrum close to that of Q(B)(-), so that the Q(B)(-) changes are canceled out during the inhibitor displacement process. On the second flash, one monitors the destruction of the semiquinone, leading transiently to the Q(A)Q(B) state, followed by inhibitor rebinding. This allows a direct measurement of the binding kinetics. This behavior was observed both in chromatophores and in isolated reaction centers from R. capsulatus, but not in R. sphaeroides.  相似文献   

4.
Fumarase catalyzes the reversible, stereospecific hydration of fumarate to form L-malate. We have determined the viscosity dependence of V/K and V in both the forward and the reverse directions at pH 6.9 in the absence and presence of several viscosogenic reagents. V/K for fumarate hydration decreases with increasing concentrations of glycerol and sucrose, but is unaffected by increasing concentrations of the polymeric viscosogen polyethyleneglycol (av MW, 10,000 da). V/K for malate dehydration similarly decreases with increasing concentrations of both glycerol and sucrose, but is unaffected by increasing concentrations of polyethylene glycol. Equilibrium constants, calculated from the ratio of V/K values for malate dehydration and fumarate hydration at various concentrations of glycerol, closely match the experimentally determined equilibrium constants at the same concentrations of glycerol. Both experimental and calculated equilibrium constants decrease with increasing concentrations of viscosogens. V/K for the dehydration of (-)-tartrate, a poor substrate, is unaffected by increasing concentrations of glycerol. Analysis of the microviscosity dependence of malate dehydration and fumarate hydration suggests that both substrates bind at diffusion-limited rates. The viscosity dependence of substrate and product dissociation steps may also contribute to the viscosity dependence of V/K values for both substrates. The viscosity dependence of the maximal velocities argues that product dissociation steps are rate-limiting and diffusion controlled.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The interaction between TANDEM (a des-methyl analogue of triostin A) and poly(dA-dT) results in extension of the helix by 6.8 Å for each ligand molecule bound, exactly as predicted for a bis-intercalation reaction. Cooperativity is evident in Scatchard plots for the interaction at ionic strengths of 0.2 and 1.0, where the binding constant is diminished compared to that which pertains at low salt concentration. Binding to a natural DNA (calf thymus), already considerably weaker than binding to poly(dA-dT), is also sensitive to increased ionic strength. With a self-complementary octanucleotide d(G-G-T-A-T-A-C-C) the binding curve indicates the presence of a single des-N-tetramethyltriostin A binding site per helical fragment with a non-cooperative association constant about 6·106 M?1. Detergent-induced dissociation of des-N-tetramethyltriostin A-poly(dA-dT) complexes results in a simple exponential decay at all levels of binding, but the time constant of decay is dependent upon the initial binding ratio. This behaviour cannot directly explain the cooperativity of equilibrium binding isotherms but suggests the occurrence of relatively long-lived perturbations of the helical structure by binding of the ligand. [Ala3, Ala7]des-N-tetramethyltriostin A, which has a more flexible octapeptide ring lacking the disulphide cross-bridge, dissociates from poly(dA-dT) much faster than des-N-tetramethyltriostin A. Dissociation of des-N-tetramethyltriostin A from calf thymus DNA is more rapid than dissociation of triostin A or other quinoxaline antibiotics, which may account for its low antimicrobial activity.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Lavergne J  Matthews C  Ginet N 《Biochemistry》1999,38(14):4542-4552
1. The absorption changes associated with the formation of P+QBred (QBred stands for the semiquinone state of the secondary quinone acceptor) were investigated in chromatophores of Rhodobacter capsulatus. Marked modifications of the semiquinone spectrum were observed when the pH was lowered from 7 to 5. These modifications match those expected for a complete conversion of QBred from the anionic state QB- at pH 7 to the neutral protonated state QBH at pH 5. Similar modifications were observed in chromatophores from Rb. sphaeroides, but not in purified reaction centers from Rb. capsulatus, suggesting that the environment of the reaction center (native membrane vs detergent micelle) is the crucial parameter. 2. The recombination reaction P+QBred --> PQB was investigated as a function of pH. No particular kinetic heterogeneity was observed at low pH, showing that QBH remains mostly bound to the reaction center. The rate constant reaches a minimum value of 0.08 s-1 at pH 6, suggesting that the direct route for recombination prevails in chromatophores below this pH, instead of the usual pathway via QA-. 3. The proton uptake caused by QBred is about 1 below pH 7 and decreases at higher pH. It is suggested that the pH dependence of the conversion of QB- to QBH, occurring in a range where the uptake is constant, cannot be accommodated by a purely electrostatic model, but probably involves a conformational change. 4. The kinetics of the electron-transfer reaction QA-QB-->QAQBred were investigated. A 2-fold acceleration was observed between pH 7 and pH 5 (t1/2 approximately 30 and 15 microseconds, respectively). A fast (<10 microseconds) unresolved phase appears to be present at both pHs. The second electron-transfer QA-QBred-->QAQBH2 proceeds with a similar rate as the first electron transfer (15-30 microseconds phase). Consequences for the rate-limiting step are discussed. 5. The carotenoid shift, indicative of the membrane potential, displays a rising phase concomitant with the QA-QB-->QAQBred electron transfer. Its relative extent is markedly increased at pH 5, with part of the kinetics occurring during the unresolved fast phase. 6. The extent of the electrochromic shift of bacteriopheophytin around 750 nm associated with formation of QBred decreases toward acidic pH, reflecting the charge compensation due to proton uptake and the formation of neutral QBH.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The Escherichia coli DEAD-box protein A (DbpA) is an RNA helicase that utilizes the energy from ATP binding and hydrolysis to facilitate structural rearrangements of rRNA. We have used the fluorescent nucleotide analogues, mantADP and mantATP, to measure the equilibrium binding affinity and kinetic mechanism of nucleotide binding to DbpA in the absence of RNA. Binding generates an enhancement in mant-nucleotide fluorescence and a corresponding reduction in intrinsic DbpA fluorescence, consistent with fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from DbpA tryptophan(s) to bound nucleotides. Fluorescent modification does not significantly interfere with the affinities and kinetics of nucleotide binding. Different energy transfer efficiencies between DbpA-mantATP and DbpA-mantADP complexes suggest that DbpA adopts nucleotide-dependent conformations. ADP binds (K(d) approximately 50 microM at 22 degrees C) 4-7 times more tightly than ATP (K(d) approximately 400 microM at 22 degrees C). Both nucleotides bind with relatively temperature-independent association rate constants (approximately 1-3 microM(-1) s(-1)) that are much lower than predicted for a diffusion-limited reaction. Differences in the binding affinities are dictated primarily by the dissociation rate constants. ADP binding occurs with a positive change in the heat capacity, presumably reflecting a nucleotide-induced conformational rearrangement of DbpA. At low temperatures (<22 degrees C), the binding free energies are dominated by favorable enthalpic and unfavorable entropic contributions. At physiological temperatures (>22 degrees C), ADP binding occurs with positive entropy changes. We favor a mechanism in which ADP binding increases the conformational flexibility and dynamics of DbpA.  相似文献   

11.
Patel MP  Blanchard JS 《Biochemistry》2001,40(17):5119-5126
The recent identification of the enzyme in Mycobacterium tuberculosis that catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of the unique low molecular weight disulfide mycothione, mycothione reductase, has led us to examine the mechanism of catalysis in greater detail. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters V and V/K for NADPH, NADH, and an active analogue of mycothione disulfide, des-myo-inositol mycothione disulfide, has been determined. An analysis of the pH profiles has allowed the tentative assignment of catalytically significant residues crucial to the mechanism of disulfide reduction, namely, the His444-Glu449 ion pair and Cys39. Solvent kinetic isotope effects were observed on V and V/K(DIMSSM), yielding values of 1.7 +/- 0.2 and 1.4 +/- 0.2, respectively, but not on V/K(NADPH). Proton inventory studies (V versus mole fraction of D(2)O) were linear, indicative of a single proton transfer in a solvent isotopically sensitive step. Steady-state primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on V have been determined using NADPH and NADH, yielding values of 1.27 +/- 0.03 and 1.66 +/- 0.14, respectively. The pre-steady-state primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect on enzyme reduction has values of 1.82 +/- 0.04 and 1.59 +/- 0.06 for NADPH and NADH, respectively. The steady-state primary deuterium kinetic isotope effect using NADH coincide with that obtained under single turnover conditions, suggesting the complete expression of the intrinsic primary kinetic isotope effect. Rapid reaction studies on the reductive half-reaction using NADPH and NADH yielded maximal rates of 129 +/- 2 and 20 +/- 1 s(-1), respectively, while similar studies of the oxidation of the two-electron reduced enzyme by mycothiol disulfide yielded a maximum rate of 190 +/- 10 s(-1). These data suggest a unique flavoprotein disulfide mechanism in which the rate of the oxidative half-reaction is slightly faster than the rate of the reductive half-reaction.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Clack JW 《BMB reports》2008,41(7):548-553
The interaction of the rod GTP binding protein, Transducin (G(t)), with bleached Rhodopsin (R(*)) was investigated by measuring radiolabeled guanine nucleotide binding to and release from soluble and/or membrane-bound G(t) by reconstituting G(t) containing bound GDP (G(t-)GDP) or the hydrolysis-resistant GTP analog guanylyl imidodiphosphate (G(t-)p[NH]ppG) with R* under physiological conditions. Release of GDP and p[NH]ppG from G(t) occurred to the same extent and with the same light sensitivity both in the presence and absence of added GTP. Significant amounts of G(t) without bound nucleotide (G(t-)) were generated. When ROS containing bleached rhodopsin (R(*)) were centrifuged in low ionic strength buffer, G(t-) remained associated with the membrane fraction, whereas G(t-)GDP remained in the soluble fraction. These results suggest that G(t-)GDP and G(t-)p[NH]ppG have similar affinities for R(*). The results also suggest that G(t-), rather than G(t-)GDP, is the moiety which exhibits tight, "light-induced" binding to rhodopsin.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of metal ion (Cd(2+), Zn(2+), Ni(2+)) binding on the electrogenic phases of proton transfer connected with reduction of quinone Q(B) in chromatophores from Rhodobacter sphaeroides was studied by time-resolved electric potential changes. In the presence of metals, the electrogenic transients associated with proton transfer on first and second flash at pH 8 were found to be slower by factors of 3-6. This is essentially the same effect of metal binding that was observed on optical transients in isolated reaction centers (RC), where the metal ion was shown to inhibit proton transfer [Paddock, M. L., Graige, M. S., Feher, G., and Okamura, M. Y. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 6183-6188]. The effect of metal binding on the kinetics in chromatophores is, therefore, similarly attributed to inhibition of proton uptake, which becomes rate-limiting. A striking observation was an increase in the amplitude of the electrogenic proton-uptake phase after the first flash with bound metal ion. We attribute this to a loss of internal proton rearrangement, requiring that the protons that stabilize Q(B)(-) come from solution. In mutant RCs, in which His-H126 and His-H128 are replaced with Ala, the apparent binding of Cd(2+) and Ni(2+) was decreased, showing that the binding site of these metal ions is the same as found in RC crystals [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]. Therefore, the unique proton entry point near His-H126, His-H128, and Asp-M17 that was identified in isolated RCs is also the entry point in chromatophores.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of glucono-1,5-lactone (gluconolactone) with almond beta-glucosidase was studied at pH 5.0 and 25 degrees C, in the absence and presence of glucose, by monitoring the enzyme fluorescence as a probe. From the results of fluorometric titration, the dissociation constant Kd and the maximum fluorescence intensity increase (percent) of the enzyme-gluconolactone complex relative to the enzyme alone, delta Fmax, were determined to be 12.7 microM and 14.7%, respectively. From the study of the temperature dependence of Kd, delta G degrees, delta H degrees and delta S degrees for the binding were evaluated to be -6.7 kcal mol-1, -3.5 kcal mol-1, and 10.8 e.u. (cal mol-1 deg-1), respectively, at 25 degrees C. The analysis of the fluorometric titration data in the presence of glucose revealed that these ligands bind competitively to the enzyme, probably at the same site. The results of a stopped-flow kinetic study are consistent with the following two-step mechanism: (formula; see text) which indicates that gluconolactone (L) and the enzyme (E) transiently form a loosely bound complex, ELtr (k-1/k+1 = 4.5 mM), in the first rapid bimolecular association step, and ELtr is converted into a more tightly bound complex EL (k+2 = 94 s-1, k-2 = 0.36 s-1) in the subsequent slow unimolecular process. The fluorescence intensity increase occurs solely in the latter step.  相似文献   

16.
The bacterial recombinase RecA forms a nucleoprotein filament in vitro with single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) at its primary DNA binding site, site I. This filament has a second site, site II, which binds ssDNA and double-stranded DNA. We have investigated the binding of ssDNA to the RecA protein in the presence of adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) cofactor using fluorescence anisotropy. The RecA protein carried out DNA strand exchange with a 5'-fluorescein-labeled 32-mer oligonucleotide. The anisotropy signal was shown to measure oligonucleotide binding to RecA, and the relationship between signal and binding density was determined. Binding of ssDNA to site I of RecA was stable at high NaCl concentrations. Binding to site II could be described by a simple two-state equilibrium, K = 4.5 +/- 1.5 x 10(5) m(-1) (37 degrees C, 150 mm NaCl, pH 7.4). The reaction was enthalpy-driven and entropy-opposed. It depended on salt concentration and was sensitive to the type of monovalent anion, suggesting that anion-dependent protein conformations contribute to ssDNA binding at site II.  相似文献   

17.
Wei  Rongmei Judy  Zhang  Yingying  Mao  Junjun  Kaur  Divya  Khaniya  Umesh  Gunner  M. R. 《Photosynthesis research》2022,152(2):153-165
Photosynthesis Research - The photosynthetic bacterial reaction centers from purple non-sulfur bacteria use light energy to drive the transfer of electrons from cytochrome c to ubiquinone....  相似文献   

18.
Previous proton nuclear magnetic resonance (nmr) studies have indicated that inositol hexaphosphate (IHP) can stabilize hemoglobin (Hb) Kansas in a deoxy-like quaternary structure even when fully liganded with carbon monoxide (CO) (S. Ogawa, A. Mayer, and R. G. Shulman, 1972, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 49, 1485–1491). In the present report we have investigated both CO binding at equilibrium and the CO binding and release kinetics to determine if Hb Kansas + IHP is devoid of cooperativity, as would be suggested by the nmr studies just quoted. The equilibrium measurements show that Hb Kansas + IHP has a very low affinity for CO (P12 = 1.2 mm Hg and Keq = 5.4 × 105M?1) and almost no cooperativity (n = 1.1) at pH 7, 25 °C. The CO “on” and “off” kinetics also show no evidence for cooperativity. In addition, the equilibrium constant estimated from the kinetic rate constants (Keq = 5.2 × 105M?1 with kon = 1.03 × 105M?1 · S? and koff = 0.198 S?1) is in excellent agreement with the equilibrium constant determined directly. Thus, both kinetic and equilibrium measurements allow us to conclude that CO binding to Hb Kansas + IHP occurs without significant cooperativity.  相似文献   

19.
The different roles of ubiquinone-10 (UQ10) at the primary and secondary quinone (QA and QB) binding sites of Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26 reaction centres are governed by the protein microenvironment. The 4C=O carbonyl group of QA is unusually strongly hydrogen-bonded, in contrast to QB. This asymmetric binding seems to determine their different functions. The asymmetric hydrogen-bonding at QA can be caused intrinsically by distortion of the methoxy groups or extrinsically by binding to specific amino-acid side groups. Different X-ray-based structural models show contradictory orientations of the methoxy groups and do not provide a clear picture. To elucidate if distortion of the methoxy groups induces this hydrogen-bonding, their (ring-)C-O vibrations were assigned by use of site-specifically labelled [5-13C]UQ10 and [6-13C]UQ10 reconstituted at either the QA or the QB binding site. Two infrared bands at 1288 cm(-1) and 1264 cm(-1) were assigned to the methoxy vibrations. They did not shift in frequency at either the QA or QB binding sites, as compared with unbound UQ10. As the frequencies of these vibrations and their coupling are sensitive to the conformations of the methoxy groups, different conformations of the C(5) and C(6) methoxy groups at the QA and QB binding sites can now be excluded. Both methoxy groups are oriented out of plane at QA and QB. Therefore, hydrogen-bonding to His M219 combined with electrostatic interactions with the Fe2+ ion seems to determine the strong asymmetric binding of QA.  相似文献   

20.
The two-step mechanism of interaction of thiamine diphosphate (ThDP) with transketolase (TK) has been studied: TK + ThDP <--> TK...ThDP <--> TK*-ThDP. The scheme involves the formation of inactive intermediate complex TK...ThDP followed by its transformation into catalytically active holoenzyme, TK*-ThDP. The dissociation and kinetic constants for individual stages of this process have been determined. The values of forward and backward rate constants change in the presence of the donor substrate hydroxypyruvate. This finally leads to an increase in the overall affinity of the coenzyme to TK.  相似文献   

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