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Biophysical Journal 84:3240-3251 (2003)
© 2003 The Biophysical Society

Energy Trapping and Detrapping in Reaction Center Mutants from Rhodobacter sphaeroides

Zivile Katiliene, Evaldas Katilius and Neal W. Woodbury

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Center for the Study of Early Events in Photosynthesis, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604, USA

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Zivile Katiliene, Fax: 480-965-2747; E-mail: zivile{at}asu.edu.

Time-resolved fluorescence of chromatophores isolated from strains of Rhodobacter sphaeroides containing light harvesting complex I (LHI) and reaction center (RC) (no light harvesting complex II) was measured at several temperatures between 295 K and 10 K. Measurements were performed to investigate energy trapping from LHI to the RC in RC mutants that have a P/P+ midpoint potential either above or below wild-type (WT). Six different strains were investigated: WT + LHI, four mutants with altered RC P/P+ midpoint potentials, and an LHI-only strain. In the mutants with the highest P/P+ midpoint potentials, the electron transfer rate decreases significantly, and at low temperatures it is possible to directly observe energy transfer from LHI to the RC by detecting the fluorescence kinetics from both complexes. In all mutants, fluorescence kinetics are multiexponential. To explain this, RC + LHI fluorescence kinetics were analyzed using target analysis in which specific kinetic models were compared. The kinetics at all temperatures can be well described with a model which accounts for the energy transfer between LHI and the RC and also includes the relaxation of the charge separated state P+HA-, created in the RC as a result of the primary charge separation.







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Copyright © 2003 by the Biophysical Society.