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Electron paramagnetic resonance investigation of photosynthetic reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26 in which Fe2+ was replaced by Cu2+. Determination of hyperfine interactions and exchange and dipole-dipole interactions between Cu2+ and QA-.
Authors:R Calvo  M C Passeggi  R A Isaacson  M Y Okamura  and G Feher
Institution:INTEC (Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas and Universidad Nacional del Litoral), Santa Fe, Argentina.
Abstract: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).
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