Wa. Cramer et al., SOME NEW STRUCTURAL ASPECTS AND OLD CONTROVERSIES CONCERNING THE CYTOCHROME B(6)F COMPLEX OF OXYGENIC PHOTOSYNTHESIS, Annual review of plant physiology and plant molecular biology, 47, 1996, pp. 477-508
The cytochrome b(6)f complex functions in oxygenic photosynthetic memb
ranes as the redox link between the photosynthetic reaction center com
plexes II and I and also functions in proton translocation. It is an i
deal integral membrane protein complex in which to study structure and
function because of the existence of a large amount of primary sequen
ce data, purified complex, the emergence of structures, and the abilit
y of flash kinetic spectroscopy to assay function in a readily accessi
ble ms-100 mu s time domain. The redox active polypeptides are cytochr
omes f and b(6) (organelle encoded) and the Rieske iron-sulfur protein
(nuclear encoded) in a mol wt = 210,000 dimeric complex that is belie
ved to contain 22-24 transmembrane helices. The high resolution struct
ure of the lumen-side domain of cytochrome f shows it to be an elongat
e (75 Angstrom long) mostly beta-strand, two-domain protein, with the
N-terminal alpha-amino group as orthogonal heme ligand and an internal
linear 11-Angstrom bound water chain. An unusual electron transfer ev
ent, the oxidant-induced reduction of a significant fraction of the p
(lumen)-side cytochrome b heme by plastosemiquinone indicates that the
electron transfer pathway in the b(6)f complex can be described by a
version of the Q-cycle mechanism, originally proposed to describe simi
lar processes in the mitochondrial and bacterial bc(1) complexes.