| Nucleotide and deduced polypeptide sequences of the photosynthetic reaction-center, B870 antenna, and flanking polypeptides from R. capsulata Cell, Volume 37, Issue 3, 1 July 1984, Pages 949-957 Douglas C. Youvan, Edward J. Bylina, Marie Alberti, Helmut Begusch and John E. Hearst Summary The complete nucleotide sequence (8867 bp) and the deduced polypeptide sequence are given for 11 proteins from the photosynthetic gene cluster of R. capsulata (46 kb), including the photosynthetic reaction-center L, M, and H subunits and the B870α and B870β polypeptides (light-harvesting I). These polypeptides bind bacteriochlorophyll, bacteriopheophytin, carotenoids, and quinones that are involved in the primary light reactions of photosynthesis. Hydropathy plots indicate that the L and M subunits are transmembrane proteins that may cross the membrane five times, while the H subunit has only one hydrophobic section near the amino terminus, which may be transmembrane. The L and M subunits are homologous over their entire length and have a high degree of homology with the Q protein from photosystem II of higher plants. An additional six genes were identified that may have some unknown role in bioenergetics since only mutations that affect the differentiation of the photosynthetic apparatus are known to map to this gene cluster. Summary | PDF (1053 kb) |
| Study of wild type and genetically modified reaction centers from Rhodobacter capsulatus: structural comparison with Rhodopseudomonas viridis and Rhodobacter sphaeroides Biophysical Journal, Volume 65, Issue 2, 1 August 1993, Pages 652-660 L. Baciou, E.J. Bylina and P. Sebban Abstract Reaction centers from the purple bacterium Rhodobacter (Rb.) capsulatus and from two mutants ThrL226-->Ala and IleL229-->Ser, modified in the binding protein pocket of the secondary quinone acceptor (QB), have been studied by flash-induced absorbance spectroscopy. In ThrL226-->Ala, the binding affinities for endogenous QB (ubiquinone 10) and UQ6 are found to be two to three times as high as the wild type. In contrast, in IleL229-->Ser, the binding affinity for UQ6 is decreased about three times compared to the wild type. In ThrL226-->Ala, a markedly increased sensitivity (approximately 30 times) to o-phenanthroline is observed. In Rhodopseudomonas viridis, where Ala is naturally in position L226, the sensitivity to o-phenanthroline is close to that observed in ThrL226-->Ala. We propose that the presence of Ala in position L226 is responsible for the high sensitivity to that inhibitor. The pH dependencies of the rate constants of P+QB- (kBP) charge recombination kinetics (P is a dimer of bacteriochlorophyll, and QB is the secondary quinone electron acceptor) show destabilization of QB- in ThrL226-->Ala and IleL229-->Ser, compared to the wild type. At low pH, similar apparent pK values of protonation of amino acids around QB- are measured in the wild type and the mutants. In contrast to Rb. sphaeroides, in the wild type Rb. capsulatus, kBP substantially increases in the pH range 7–10.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Abstract | PDF (895 kb) |
| Absorption and CD Spectroscopy and Modeling of Various LH2 Complexes from Purple Bacteria Biophysical Journal, Volume 82, Issue 4, 1 April 2002, Pages 2184-2197 Sofia Georgakopoulou, Raoul N. Frese, Evelyn Johnson, Corline Koolhaas, Richard J. Cogdell, Rienk van Grondelle and Gert van der Zwan Abstract The absorption (OD) and circular dichroism (CD) spectra of LH2 complexes from various purple bacteria have been measured and modeled. Based on the lineshapes of the spectra we can sort the LH2 complexes into two distinguishable groups: “acidophila”-like (type 1) and “molischianum”-like (type 2). Starting from the known geometric structures of () and () we can model the OD and CD spectra of all species by just slightly varying some key parameters: the interaction strength, the energy difference of - and -bound B850 bacteriochlorophylls (BChls), the orientation of the B800 and B850 BChls, and the (in)homogeneous broadening. Although the ring size can vary, the data are consistent with all the LH2 complexes having basically very similar structures. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (276 kb) |
Copyright © 1996 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 70, Issue 6, 2469-2492, 1 June 1996
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(96)79820-X
Research Article
C.R. Lancaster, H. Michel, B. Honig and M.R. Gunner
Max-Planck-Institut für Biophysik, Abteilung Molekulare Membranbiologie, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Based on new Rhodopseudomonas (Rp.) viridis reaction center (RC) coordinates with a reliable structure of the secondary acceptor quinone (QB) site, a continuum dielectric model and finite difference technique have been used to identify clusters of electrostatically interacting ionizable residues. Twenty-three residues within a distance of 25 A from QB (QB cluster) have been shown to be strongly electrostatically coupled to QB, either directly or indirectly. An analogous cluster of 24 residues is found to interact with QA (QA cluster). Both clusters extend to the cytoplasmic surface in at least two directions. However, the QB cluster differs from the QA cluster in that it has a surplus of acidic residues, more strong electrostatic interactions, is less solvated, and experiences a strong positive electrostatic field arising from the polypeptide backbone. Consequently, upon reduction of QA or QB, it is the QB cluster, and not the QA cluster, which is responsible for substoichiometric proton uptake at neutral pH. The bulk of the changes in the QB cluster are calculated to be due to the protonation of a tightly coupled cluster of the three Glu residues (L212, H177, and M234) within the QB cluster. If the lifetime of the doubly reduced state QB2- is long enough, Asp M43 and Ser L223 are predicted to also become protonated. The calculated complex titration behavior of the strongly interacting residues of the QB cluster and the resulting electrostatic response to electron transfer may be a common feature in proton-transferring membrane protein complexes.