The kinetics of tunnel electron transitions in reaction centers of photosynthetic bacteria Rkodopseudomonas viridis are characterized by paradoxical peculiarities. ( 1) The time of the high-temperature (300 K) transfer of an electron to the cation-radical of bacteriochlorophyll BCl: from the neigbbo
Electron transfer in reaction centers ofRhodobacter sphaeroidesandRhodobacter capsulatusmonitored by fluorescence of the bacteriochlorophyll dimer
✍ Scribed by Szabolcs Osváth; Gábor Laczkó; Pierre Sebban; Péter Maróti
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 736 KB
- Volume
- 47
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0166-8595
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✦ Synopsis
Spectral and kinetic characteristics of fluorescence from isolated reaction centers of photosynthetic purple bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodobacter capsulatus were measured at room temperature under rectangular shape of excitation at 810 nm. The kinetics of fluorescence at 915 nm reflected redox changes due to light and dark reactions in the donor and acceptor quinone complex of the reaction center as identified by absorption changes at 865 nm (bacteriochlorophyll dimer) and 450 nm (quinones) measured simultaneously with the fluorescence. Based on redox titration and gradual bleaching of the dimer, the yield of fluorescence from reaction centers could be separated into a time-dependent (originating from the dimer) and a constant part (coming from contaminating pigment (detached bacteriochlorin)). The origin was also confirmed by the corresponding excitation spectra of the 915 nm fluorescence. The ratio of yields of constant fluorescence over variable fluorescence was much smaller in Rhodobacter sphaeroides (0.15 -4-0.1) than in Rhodobacter capsulatus (1.2 -t-0.3). It was shown that the changes in fluorescence yield reflected the disappearance of the dimer and the quenching by the oxidized primary qninone. The redox changes of the secondary quinone did not have any influence on the yield but excess quinone in the solution quenched the (constant part of) fluorescence. The relative yields of fluorescence in different redox states of the reaction center were tabulated. The fluorescence of the dimer can be used as an effective tool in studies of redox reactions in reaction centers, an alternative to the measurements of absorption kinetics.
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