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Electron Transfer Between Spinach Plastocyanin Mutants and Photosystem 1
Author(s) -
Sigfridsson Kalle,
Young Simon,
Hansson örjan
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1997.00805.x
Subject(s) - plastocyanin , photosystem i , p700 , chemistry , photosystem ii , electron transfer , cytochrome b6f complex , photochemistry , photosynthetic reaction centre , biophysics , photosynthesis , biochemistry , biology
Two distinct regions of plastocyanin, one hydrophobic and one acidic, are generally thought to be involved in the electron‐transfer reactions with its physiological partners, cytochrome f and photosystem 1. To probe the importance of the hydrophobic patch in the reaction with photosystem 1, seven mutant plastocyanin proteins have been constructed with the following mutations: Gly7A1a, Gly8Asp, Ser11Asp, Ser11Gly, Pro36Gly, Ser85Thr and Gln88Asn. The electron‐transfer reaction was investigated by transient flash‐photolysis absorption spectroscopy. All proteins remained active in photosystem 1 reduction, showing a biphasic reaction. However, the substitution in position 36 resulted in a drastic decrease in efficiency, suggesting that this residue is involved in a specific contact with photosystem 1. Measurements over a wide range of plastocyanin concentration, ionic strength and pH, showed different properties for the two kinetic phases. A mechanism involving a rate‐limiting conformational change accounts well for the observations. Electron transfer from plastocyanin to photosystem 1 would thus require a conversion from an inactive to an active conformation of the complex. Both hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions are important in the dynamics. The structural integrity of a few critical residues, including Pro36, is essential for efficient photosystem 1 reduction.

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