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The 2-methoxy group of ubiquinone is essential for function of the acceptor quinones in reaction centers from Rba. sphaeroides
Authors:Wraight Colin A  Vakkasoglu Ahmet S  Poluektov Yuri  Mattis Aidas J  Nihan Danielle  Lipshutz Bruce H
Institution:Center for Biophysics and Computational Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA. cwraight@kife.uiuc.edu
Abstract:The orientation of a methoxy substituent is known to substantially influence the electron affinity and vibrational spectroscopy of benzoquinones, and has been suggested to be important in determining the function of ubiquinone as a redox cofactor in bioenergetics. Ubiquinone functions as both the primary (Q(A)) and secondary (Q(B)) quinone in the reaction centers of many purple photosynthetic bacteria, and is almost unique in its ability to establish the necessary redox free energy gap for 1-electron transfer between them. The role of the methoxy substitution in this requirement was examined using monomethoxy analogues of ubiquinone-4 - 2-methoxy-3,5-dimethyl-6-isoprenyl-1,4-benzoquinone (2-MeO-Q) and 3-methoxy-2,5-dimethyl-6-isoprenyl-1,4-benzoquinone (3-MeO-Q). Only 2-MeO-Q was able to simultaneously act as Q(A) and Q(B) and the necessary redox potential tuning was shown to occur in the Q(B) site. In the absence of active Q(B), the IR spectrum of the monomethoxy quinones was examined in vitro and in the Q(A) site, and a novel distinction between the two methoxy groups was tentatively identified, consistent with the unique role of the 2-methoxy group in distinguishing Q(A) and Q(B) functionality.
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