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Manipulating the Energetics and Rates of Electron Transfer in Rhodobacter capsulatus Reaction Centers with Asymmetric Pigment Content
Author(s) -
Kaitlyn M. Faries,
Nicholas P. Dylla,
Deborah K. Hanson,
Dewey Holten,
Philip D. Laible,
Christine Kirmaier
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b01389
Subject(s) - rhodobacter , bacteriochlorophyll , chemistry , photochemistry , electron transfer , mutant , rhodobacter sphaeroides , cofactor , pigment , photosynthetic reaction centre , excited state , stereochemistry , crystallography , photosynthesis , biochemistry , physics , atomic physics , enzyme , organic chemistry , gene
Seemingly redundant parallel pathways for electron transfer (ET), composed of identical sets of cofactors, are a cornerstone feature of photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) involved in light-energy conversion. In native bacterial RCs, both A and B branches house one bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) and one bacteriopheophytin (BPh), but the A branch is used exclusively. Described herein are the results obtained for two Rhodobacter capsulatus RCs with an unnaturally high degree of cofactor asymmetry, two BPh on the RC's B side and two BChl on the A side. These pigment changes derive, respectively, from the His(M180)Leu mutation [a BPh (Φ B ) replaces the B-side BChl (B B )], and the Leu(M212)His mutation [a BChl (β A ) replaces the A-side BPh (H A )]. Additionally, Tyr(M208)Phe was employed to disfavor ET to the A branch; in one mutant, Val(M131)Glu creates a hydrogen bond to H B o enhance ET to H B . In both Φ B mutants, the decay kinetics of the excited primary ET donor (P*) resolve three populations with lifetimes of ∼9 ps (50-60%), ∼40 ps (10-20%), and ∼200 ps (20-30%), with P + Φ B - formed predominantly from the 9 ps fraction. The 50-60% yield of P + Φ B - is the highest yet observed for a Φ B -containing RC. The results provide insight into factors needed for efficient multistep ET.

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