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1.
The interaction of metal ions with isolated photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from the purple bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides, Rhodobacter capsulatus, and Rhodopseudomonas viridis has been investigated with transient optical and magnetic resonance techniques. In RCs from all species, the electrochromic response of the bacteriopheophytin cofactors associated with Q(A)(-)Q(B) --> Q(A)Q(B)(-) electron transfer is slowed in the presence of Cu(2+). This slowing is similar to the metal ion effect observed for RCs from Rb. sphaeroides where Zn(2+) was bound to a specific site on the surface of the RC [Utschig et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 8278]. The coordination environments of the Cu(2+) sites were probed with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, providing the first direct spectroscopic evidence for the existence of a second metal site in RCs from Rb. capsulatus and Rps. viridis. In the dark, RCs with Cu(2+) bound to the surface exhibit axially symmetric EPR spectra. Electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectral results indicate multiple weakly hyperfine coupled (14)N nuclei in close proximity to Cu(2+). These ESEEM spectra resemble those observed for Cu(2+) RCs from Rb. sphaeroides [Utschig et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 2961] and indicate that two or more histidines ligate the Cu(2+) at the surface site in each RC. Thus, RCs from Rb. sphaeroides, Rb. capsulatus, and Rps. viridis each have a structurally analogous Cu(2+) binding site that is involved in modulating the Q(A)(-)Q(B) --> Q(A)Q(B)(-) electron-transfer process. Inspection of the Rps. viridis crystal structure reveals four potential histidine ligands from three different subunits (M16, H178, H72, and L211) located beneath the Q(B) binding pocket. The location of these histidines is surprisingly similar to the grouping of four histidine residues (H68, H126, H128, and L211) observed in the Rb. sphaeroides RC crystal structure. Further elucidation of these Cu(2+) sites will provide a means to investigate localized proton entry into the RCs of Rb. capsulatus and Rps. viridis as well as locate a site of protein motions coupled with electron transfer.  相似文献   

2.
We report electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) experiments in frozen solutions of unreduced and reduced photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26 in which Fe2+ has been chemically replaced by the isotope 65Cu2+. Samples in which the primary quinone acceptor QA is unreduced (Cu2+QA:RCs) give a powder EPR spectrum typical for Cu2+ having axial symmetry, corresponding to a d(x2 - y2) ground state orbital, with g values g parallel = 2.314 +/- 0.001 and g perpendicular = 2.060 +/- 0.003. The spectrum shows a hyperfine structure for the nuclear spin of copper (65I = 3/2) with A parallel = (-167 +/- 1) x 10(-4) cm-1 and /A perpendicular/ = (16 +/- 2) x 10(-4) cm-1, and hyperfine couplings with three nitrogen ligands. This has been verified in samples containing the naturally occurring 14N isotope (l = 1), and in samples where the nitrogen ligands to copper were replaced by the isotope 15N (l = 1/2). We introduce a model for the electronic structure at the position of the metal ion which reflects the recently determined three-dimensional structure of the RCs of Rb. sphaeroides (Allen, J. P., G. Feher, T. O. Yeates, H. Komiya, and D. C. Rees. 1987. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 84:5730: Allen, J. P., G. Feher, T. O. Yeates, H. Komiya, and D. C. Rees. 1988. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 85:8487) as well as our EPR results. In this model the copper ion is octahedrally coordinated to three nitrogens from histidine residues and to one carboxylate oxygen from a glutamic acid, forming a distorted square in the plane of the d(x2 = y2) ground state orbital. It is also bound to a nitrogen of another histidine and to the other carboxylate oxygen of the same glutamic acid residue, in a direction approximately normal to this plane. The EPR spectrum changes drastically when the quinone acceptor QA is chemically reduced (Cu2+QA-:RCs); the change is due to the exchange and dipole-dipole interactions between the Cu2+ and QA- spins. A model spin Hamiltonian proposed for this exchange coupled cooper-quinone spin dimer accounts well for the observed spectra. From a comparison of the EPR spectra of the Cu2+QA:RC and CU2+QA-:RC complexes we obtain the values /J0/ = (0.30 +/- 0.02) K for the isotropic exchange coupling, and /d/ = (0.010 +/- 0.002) K for the projection of the dipole-dipole interaction tensor on the symmetry axis of the copper spin. From the EPR experiments only the relative signs of J0 and d can be deduced; it was determined that they have the same sign. The magnitude of the exchange coupling calculated for Cu2+QA-:RC is similar to that observed for the Fe2+QA-:RC complex (J0 = -0.43K). The exchange coupling is discussed in terms of the superexchange paths connecting the Cu2+ ion and the quinone radical using the structural data for the RCs of Rb. sphaeroides. From the value of the dipole-dipole interaction, d, we determined R approximately 8.4 A for the weighted distance between the metal ion and the quinone in reduced RCs, which is to be compared with 10 A obtained from x-ray analysis of unreduced RCs. This points to a shortening of the Cu2+ -QA- distance upon reduction of the quinone, as has been proposed by Allen et al. (1988).  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The reaction center (RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides uses light energy to reduce and protonate a quinone molecule, Q(B) (the secondary quinone electron acceptor), to form quinol, Q(B)H2. Asp-L210 and Asp-M17 have been proposed to be components of the pathway for proton transfer [Axelrod, H. L., Abresch, E. C., Paddock, M. L., Okamura, M. Y., and Feher, G. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97, 1542-1547]. To test the importance of these residues for efficient proton transfer, the rates of the proton-coupled electron-transfer reaction k(AB)(2) (Q(A-*)Q(B-*) + H+ <==>Q(A-*)Q(B)H* --> Q(A)Q(B)H-) and its associated proton uptake were measured in native and mutant RCs, lacking one or both Asp residues. In the double mutant RCs, the k(AB)(2) reaction and its associated proton uptake were approximately 300-fold slower than in native RCs (pH 8). In contrast, single mutant RCs displayed reaction rates that were < or =3-fold slower than native (pH 8). In addition, the rate-limiting step of k(AB)(2) was changed from electron transfer (native and single mutants) to proton transfer (double mutant) as shown from the lack of a dependence of the observed rate on the driving force for electron transfer in the double mutant RCs compared to the native or single mutants. This implies that the rate of the proton-transfer step was reduced (> or =10(3)-fold) upon replacement of both Asp-L210 and Asp-M17 with Asn. Similar, but less drastic, differences were observed for k(AB)(1), which at pH > or =8 is coupled to the protonation of Glu-L212 [(Q(A-*)Q(B))-Glu- + H+ --> (Q(A)Q(B-*)-GluH]. These results show that the pathway for proton transfer from solution to reduced Q(B) involves both Asp-L210 and Asp-M17, which provide parallel branches to the proton-transfer pathway and through their electrostatic interaction have a cooperative effect on the proton-transfer rate. A possible mechanism for the cooperativity is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
An antiserum (AS 98) was raised against a synthetic peptide deduced from published cDNA sequences of the alpha-subunit of the putative G-protein, GZ (Fong et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 3066-3070, 1988; Matsuoka et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 5384-5388, 1988). In membrane and cytosol preparations of many but not all tested mammalian tissues, AS 98 predominantly recognized two proteins of 40 and 43 kDa Mr. Whereas high levels of a 40 kDa GZ alpha-subunit were found in rat liver membranes and in brain cytosol, AS 98 failed to detect the alpha-subunit of GZ in brain membranes.  相似文献   

6.
The primary quinone acceptor radical anion Q(A)(-)(*) (a menaquinone-9) is studied in reaction centers (RCs) of Rhodopseudomonas viridis in which the high-spin non-heme Fe(2+) is replaced by diamagnetic Zn(2+). The procedure for the iron substitution, which follows the work of Debus et al. [Debus, R. J., Feher, G., and Okamura, M. Y. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 2276-2287], is described. In Rps. viridisan exchange rate of the iron of approximately 50% +/- 10% is achieved. Time-resolved optical spectroscopy shows that the ZnRCs are fully competent in charge separation and that the charge recombination times are similar to those of native RCs. The g tensor of Q(A)(-)(*) in the ZnRCs is determined by a simulation of the EPR at 34 GHz yielding g(x) = 2.00597 (5), g(y) = 2.00492 (5), and g(z) = 2.00216 (5). Comparison with a menaquinone anion radical (MQ(4)(-)(*)) dissolved in 2-propanol identifies Q(A)(-)(*) as a naphthoquinone and shows that only one tensor component (g(x)) is predominantly changed in the RC. This is attributed to interaction with the protein environment. Electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) experiments at 9 GHz reveal a shift of the spin density distribution of Q(A)(-)(*) in the RC as compared with MQ(4)(-)(*) in alcoholic solution. This is ascribed to an asymmetry of the Q(A) binding site. Furthermore, a hyperfine coupling constant from an exchangeable proton is deduced and assigned to a proton in a hydrogen bond between the quinone oxygen and surrounding amino acid residues. By electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) techniques performed on Q(A)(-)(*) in the ZnRCs, two (14)N nuclear quadrupole tensors are determined that arise from the surrounding amino acids. One nitrogen coupling is assigned to a N(delta)((1))-H of a histidine and the other to a polypeptide backbone N-H by comparison with the nuclear quadrupole couplings of respective model systems. Inspection of the X-ray structure of Rps. viridis RCs shows that His(M217) and Ala(M258) are likely candidates for the respective amino acids. The quinone should therefore be bound by two H bonds to the protein that could, however, be of different strength. An asymmetric H-bond situation has also been found for Q(A)(-)(*) in the RC of Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) experiments are performed on the radical pair state P(960)(+) (*)Q(A)(-)(*) in ZnRCs of Rps. viridis that were treated with o-phenanthroline to block electron transfer to Q(B). The orientations of the two radicals in the radical pair obtained from transient EPR and their distance deduced from pulsed EPR (out-of-phase ESEEM) are very similar to the geometry observed for the ground state P(960)Q(A) in the X-ray structure [Lancaster, R., Michel, H. (1997) Structure 5, 1339].  相似文献   

7.
8.
Sequence information on eukaryotic DNA repair proteins provided so far only few clues concerning possible functional domains. Since the DNA repair process involves a strict sequential complex formation of several proteins [1988) FASEB J. 2, 2696-2701], we searched for special protein-protein interacting domains, which consist of tandemly repeated leucine rich motifs (LRM). Search algorithms, capable of detecting even largely divergent repeats by assessing their significance due to the tandem repetitivity, revealed that the yeast DNA repair proteins RAD1 and RAD7 contain 9 and 12 tandem LRM repeats, respectively. These results represent the first clues concerning specific domains in these proteins and assign them to the LRM superfamily, which includes such members as yeast adenylate cyclase, cell surface protein receptors and ribonuclease/angiogenin inhibitor, all exerting their function by specific protein-protein interactions involving LRM domains [( 1988) EMBO J. 7, 4151-4156; (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87, 8711-8715; (1989) Science 245, 494-499; (1990) Mol. Cell. Biol. 10, 6436-6444; (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86, 6773-6777].  相似文献   

9.
The structure of the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides was determined at 3.1-A resolution by the molecular replacement method, using the Rhodopseudomonas viridis RC as the search structure. Atomic coordinates were refined with the difference Fourier method and restrained least-squares refinement techniques to a current R factor of 22%. The tertiary structure of the RC complex is stabilized by hydrophobic interactions between the L and M chains, by interactions of the pigments with each other and with the L and M chains, by residues from the L and M chains that coordinate to the Fe2+, by salt bridges that are formed between the L and M chains and the H chain, and possibly by electrostatic forces between the ends of helices. The conserved residues at the N-termini of the L and M chains were identified as recognition sites for the H chain.  相似文献   

10.
The primary structure of artemin from Artemia cysts   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The primary structure of artemin, a major protein isolated from Artemia cysts, has been determined by direct Edman degradation of the purified protein. The amino-terminal acetylated protein has 229 amino acid residues and a high content of histidine and cysteine/cystine. A search in the GenBank Data Base at Los Alamos, using the FASTA program [Pearson, W. R. & Lipman, D. J. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 2444-2448] revealed a limited but unmistakable similarity to ferritin from vertebrates.  相似文献   

11.
The light-induced Q A /QA FTIR difference spectra of Rb. sphaeroides and Rp. viridis show very broad positive bands of small amplitude peaking around 2750 cm–1. Upon 1H/2H exchange these bands shift to about 2150 cm–1. Similarly, the Q B /QB spectra exhibit broad continuum bands at 2600 and 2800 cm–1 shifting to 2100 and 2200 cm–1 in 2H2O for Rb. sphaeroides and Rp. viridis, respectively. These continuum bands are tentatively interpreted in terms of highly polarizable hydrogen bonds in a large web of polar bonds involving cofactors, amino acid residues, and structured water molecules. As a working hypothesis, we propose that the protons participating in this web redistribute upon quinone reduction, increasing their concentration around the newly formed charged species, and leading to net proton uptake. Assuming that the precise localization of the mobile protons is dependent on the local electrostatic, this model can explain the apparent discrepancies between some results of FTIR experiments and of electrostatic calculations. Notably, it could help rationalize the observation that mobile protons tend to localize on Glu L212 upon QB reduction in Rb. sphaeroides, while for QB reduction in Rp. viridis and for QA reduction in both Rb. sphaeroides and Rp. viridis, proton uptake by a small number of carboxylic residues is not supported by the FTIR data.  相似文献   

12.
The 28 S rRNA from several vertebrate species, when examined by electron microscopy, is seen to contain regions of extensive secondary structure, as first reported for HeLa-cell 28 S rRNA by Wellauer & Dawid [(1973) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 70, 2827-2831]. Here we correlate the locations of these regions, determined from the electron-microscopic data, with the primary structure of 28 S rRNA from human, mouse and Xenopus laevis determined by sequence analysis of rDNA. The secondary-structure features observed by electron microscopy correspond closely to phylogenetically variable G + C-rich regions that largely comprise the eukaryotic expansion segments in these three species. In most if not all cases the features can be identified with long G + C-rich helices deduced from sequence data. Correlations are given between the locations of the secondary-structure features and several 'landmark' restriction sites in 28 S rDNA. By correlating the locations of the rRNA methyl groups reported elsewhere [Maden (1988) J. Mol. Biol. 201, 289-314] with the present findings it is concluded that the rRNA secondary-structure features revealed by electron microscopy are largely or wholly unmethylated.  相似文献   

13.
The X-ray crystal structure of human soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) has been determined at 2.6 A resolution, revealing a domain-swapped quaternary structure identical to that observed for the murine enzyme [Argiriadi, M. A., Morisseau, C., Hammock, B. D., and Christianson, D. W. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 10637-10642]. As with the murine enzyme, the epoxide hydrolytic mechanism of the human enzyme proceeds through an alkyl-enzyme intermediate with Asp-333 in the C-terminal domain. The structure of the human sEH complex with N-cyclohexyl-N'-(iodophenyl)urea (CIU) has been determined at 2.35 A resolution. Tyr-381 and Tyr-465 donate hydrogen bonds to the alkylurea carbonyl group of CIU, consistent with the proposed roles of these residues as proton donors in the first step of catalysis. The N-terminal domain of mammalian sEH contains a 15 A deep cleft, but its biological function is unclear. Recent experiments demonstrate that the N-terminal domain of human sEH catalyzes the metal-dependent hydrolysis of phosphate esters [Cronin, A., Mowbray, S., Dürk, H., Homburg, S., Fleming, I., Fisslthaler, B., Oesch, F., and Arand, M. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 1552-1557; Newman, J. W., Morisseau, C., Harris, T. R., and Hammock, B. D. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 1558-1563]. The binding of Mg(2+)-HPO4(2-) to the N-terminal domain of human sEH in its CIU complex reveals structural features relevant to those of the enzyme-substrate complex in the phosphatase reaction.  相似文献   

14.
Photosystem II of oxygen-evolving organisms exhibits a bicarbonate-reversible formate effect on electron transfer between the primary and secondary acceptor quinones, QA and QB. This effect is absent in the otherwise similar electron acceptor complex of purple bacteria, e.g., Rhodobacter sphaeroides. This distinction has led to the suggestion that the iron atom of the acceptor quinone complex in PS II might lack the fifth and sixth ligands provided in the bacterial reaction center (RC) by a glutamate residue at position 234 of the M-subunit in Rb. sphaeroides RCs (M232 in Rps. viridis). By site-directed mutagenesis we have altered GluM234 in RCs from Rb. sphaeroides, replacing it with valine, glutamine and glycine to form mutants M234EV, M234EQ and M234EG, respectively. These mutants grew competently under phototrophic conditions and were tested for the formate-bicarbonate effect. In chromatophores there were no detectable differences between wild type (Wt) and mutant M234EV with respect to cytochrome b-561 reduction following a flash, and no effect of bicarbonate depletion (by incubation with formate). In isolated RCs, several electron transfer activities were essentially unchanged in Wt and M234EV, M234EQ and M234EG mutants, and no formate-bicarbonate effect was observed on: (a) the fast or slow phases of recovery of the oxidized primary donor (P+) in the absence of exogenous donor, i.e., the recombination of P+Q-A or P+Q-B, respectively; (b) the kinetics of electron transfer from Q-A to QB; or (c) the flash dependent oscillations of semiquinone formation in the presence of donor to P+ (QB turnover). The absence of a formate-bicarbonate effect in these mutants suggests that GluM234 is not responsible for the absence of the formate-bicarbonate effect in Wt bacterial RCs, or at least that other factors must be taken into account. The mutant RCs were also examined for the fast primary electron transfer along the active (A-)branch of the pigment chain, leading to reduction of QA. The kinetics were resolved to reveal the reduction of the monomer bacteriochlorophyll (tau = 3.5 ps), followed by reduction of the bacteriopheophytin (tau = 0.9 ps). Both steps were essentially unaltered from the wild type. However, the rate of reduction of QA was slowed by a factor of 2 (tau = 410 +/- 30 and 47 +/- 30 ps for M234EQ and M234EV, respectively, compared to 220 ps in the wild type).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The hydrophobic transmembrane domain of glycophorin A contains a sequence motif that mediates dimerization in membrane environments. Long-range interhelical distance measurements using magic angle spinning NMR spectroscopy provide high-resolution structural constraints on the packing of the dimer interface in membrane bilayers. We show that direct packing contacts occur between glycine residues at positions 79 and 83 in the transmembrane sequence. Additional interhelical constraints between Ile76 and Gly79 and between Val80 and Gly83 restrict the rotational orientation and crossing angle of the interacting helices. These results refine our previously proposed structure of the glycophorin A dimer [Smith, S. O., and Bormann, B. J. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 92, 488-491] which revealed that the methyl groups of Val80 and Val84 are packed against Gly79 and Gly83, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
17.
In addition to the roles of antioxidant and spacer, carotenoids (Cars) in purple photosynthetic bacteria pursue two physiological functions, i.e., light harvesting and photoprotection. To reveal the mechanisms of the photoprotective function, i.e., quenching triplet bacteriochlorophyll to prevent the sensitized generation of singlet oxygen, the triplet absorption spectra were recorded for Cars, where the number of conjugated double bonds (n) is in the region of 9-13, to determine the dependence on n of the triplet lifetime. The Cars examined include those in (a) solution; (b) the reconstituted LH1 complexes; (c) the native LH2 complexes from Rba. sphaeroides G1C, Rba. sphaeroides 2.4.1, Rsp. molischianum, and Rps. acidophila 10050; (d) the RCs from Rba. sphaeroides G1C, Rba. sphaeroides 2.4.1, and Rsp. rubrum S1; and (e) the RC-LH1 complexes from Rba. sphaeroides G1C, Rba. sphaeroides 2.4.1, Rsp. molischianum, Rps. acidophila 10050, and Rsp. rubrum S1. The results lead us to propose the following mechanisms: (i) A substantial shift of the linear dependence to shorter lifetimes on going from solution to the LH2 complex was ascribed to the twisting of the Car conjugated chain. (ii) A substantial decrease in the slope of the linear dependence on going from the reconstituted LH1 to the LH1 component of the RC-LH1 complex was ascribed to the minor-component Car forming a leak channel of triplet energy. (iii) The loss of conjugation-length dependence on going from the isolated RC to the RC component of the RC-LH1 complex was ascribed to the presence of a triplet-energy reservoir consisting of bacteriochlorophylls in the RC component.  相似文献   

18.
Wang G 《FEBS letters》2002,529(2-3):157-161
The X-ray structure of the N-terminal truncated human apoA-I [Borhani et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94 (1997) 12291] and the NMR structure of intact human apoA-I [Okon et al., FEBS Lett. 517 (2002) 139] found similar repeating helices. The crystal structure is a twisted circular four-helix bundle, consisting of four molecules of apoA-I(44-243), where four copies of the lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT)-activating domains are located outside the ring structure, while the aromatic-rich strong lipid-binding domains are inside. This architecture suggests a lipid-binding mechanism that lipids directly enter the hole of the crystal structure. Indeed, four copies of Trp50 and Trp72 are exposed and oriented toward the center of the ring, initiating lipid binding. This is followed by the inside-out rotations of the terminal helices to make a belt with all the hydrophobic faces of the helices facing inward. Such lipid-binding induced rotations have an impact on the conformation of the lipid-free form. Indeed, the structure of residues 78-81 changes from helical (free) to disordered (bound) while the structure of residues 221-227 changes from extended to helical.  相似文献   

19.
Reaction centers (RCs) of purple bacteria are uniquely suited objects to study the mechanisms of the photosynthetic conversion of light energy into chemical energy. A recently introduced method of higher order derivative spectroscopy [I.K. Mikhailyuk, H. Lokstein, A.P. Razjivin, A method of spectral subband decomposition by simultaneous fitting the initial spectrum and a set of its derivatives, J. Biochem. Biophys. Methods 63 (2005) 10-23] was used to analyze the NIR absorption spectra of RC preparations from Rhodobacter (R.) sphaeroides strain 2R and Blastochloris (B.) viridis strain KH, containing bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a and b, respectively. Q(y) bands of individual RC porphyrin components (BChls and bacteriopheophytins, BPheo) were identified. The results indicate that the upper exciton level P(y+) of the photo-active BChl dimer in RCs of R. sphaeroides has an absorption maximum of 810nm. The blue shift of a complex integral band at approximately 800nm upon oxidation of the RC is caused primarily by bleaching of P(y+), rather than by an electrochromic shift of the absorption band(s) of the monomeric BChls. Likewise, the disappearance of a band peaking at 842nm upon oxidation of RCs from B. viridis indicates that this band has to be assigned to P(y+). A blue shift of an absorption band at approximately 830nm upon oxidation of RCs of B. viridis is also essentially caused by the disappearance of P(y+), rather than by an electrochromic shift of the absorption bands of monomeric BChls. Absorption maxima of the monomeric BChls, B(B) and B(A) are at 802 and 797nm, respectively, in RCs of R. sphaeroides at room temperature. BPheo co-factors H(B) and H(A) peak at 748 and 758nm, respectively, at room temperature. For B. viridis RCs the spectral positions of H(B) and H(A) were found to be 796 and 816nm, respectively, at room temperature.  相似文献   

20.
In intact rat adipocytes hormone-sensitive lipase has been shown to be phosphorylated on serine residues in two different phosphorylation sites: a regulatory site phosphorylated by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and a basal site, which does not directly affect the enzyme activity, phosphorylated by cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase(s) [(1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci USA 81, 3317-3321]. Cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase catalyzed the phosphorylation of the same two phosphorylation sites on the isolated enzyme, at serine residues. Both sites were phosphorylated at about the same rate, with the hormone-sensitive lipase activity concomitantly enhanced.  相似文献   

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