Kinetics of the c-cytochromes in chromatophores from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides as a function of the concentration of cytochrome c2. Influence of this concentration on the oscillation of the secondary acceptor of the reaction centers QB
- PMID: 2994721
- DOI: 10.1016/0005-2728(85)90069-6
Kinetics of the c-cytochromes in chromatophores from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides as a function of the concentration of cytochrome c2. Influence of this concentration on the oscillation of the secondary acceptor of the reaction centers QB
Abstract
The oxidation kinetics of Cyt c1 and c2 have been measured in normal chromatophores and in chromatophores fused with liposomes in order to increase the internal volume. The kinetics of Cyt c1 oxidation were found to be dependent on Cyt c2 concentration. The initial rate of Cyt c1 oxidation decreased after fusion by a factor of about two, indicating a process dependent on diffusion. The results do not allow a clear distinction between a diffusion of Cyt c2 along the inner membrane surface or through the inner volume of the vesicle; two- and three-dimensional models are discussed. In contrast to Cyt c1, the kinetics of oxidation of Cyt c2 were not influenced by changes in concentration. It is concluded that reduced Cyt c2 is preferentially bound to the reaction centers. A binary pattern as a function of flash number from the dark-adapted state was measured in the turn-over of the two-electron gate of the reaction center. In chromatophores with more than 0.5 cytochrome c2 molecules per reaction center, this binary pattern titrated out with a midpoint around 340 mV on reduction of the suspension. In experiments with chromatophores with a low Cyt c2 content, or with spheroplast-derived vesicles which had lost Cyt c2, the binary oscillation in the two-electron gate could be observed at much lower potentials. The results suggest that the binding of reduced cytochrome c2 modifies the behavior of the two-electron gate. A model in which reaction center dimers are stabilized by Cyt c2 is proposed to explain the effect.
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