V. Nagarajan et al., KINETICS AND FREE-ENERGY GAPS OF ELECTRON-TRANSFER REACTIONS IN RHODOBACTER-SPHAEROIDES REACTION CENTERS, Biochemistry, 32(46), 1993, pp. 12324-12336
The rates of the light-driven, electron-transfer reactions in the phot
osynthetic reaction center (RC) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides are examine
d in mutant strains in which tyrosine (M)210 is replaced by phenylalan
ine, isoleucine, or tryptophan. The spectra of the absorbance changes
between 700 and 975 nm, following excitation by 0.6-ps pulses at 605 n
m, are analyzed globally by singular value decomposition. The spectra
measured at room temperature are interpreted in terms of a model in wh
ich the excited bacteriochlorophyll dimer (P) transfers an electron t
o a bacteriopheophytin (H(L)) with time constants of 3.5 +/- 0.3, 10.5
+/- 1.0, 16 +/- 2, and 41 +/- 4 ps in wild-type RCs and the Phe, Ile,
and Trp mutants, respectively, and an electron then moves from H(L)-
to a quinone (Q(A)) with a time constant of 0.16 ns in wild-type RCs,
0.24 ns in the Phe mutant, and 0.20 ns in the Ile and Trp mutants. The
first step speeds up with decreasing temperature in wild-type RCs, re
mains virtually unchanged in the Phe mutant, and slows down in the Ile
and Trp mutants. At 80 K, the signals in the 850-975-nm region includ
e an apparent shift of the stimulated emission or absorption spectrum
of P, with a time constant of 5 ps in the Ile mutant and 13 ps in the
Trp mutant. Most of the electron transfer to H(L) occurs with time co
nstants of 55 and 155 ps in the Ile and Trp mutants, respectively, and
probably occurs from the relaxed form of P. Electron transfer from t
he initial state cannot be ruled out, however. Relaxations of P are n
ot resolved in wild-type RCs or the Phe mutant. The midpoint potential
(E(m)) of the P/P+ redox couple is measured by an electrochemical tec
hnique; the E(m), values are 500 +/- 5, 530 +/- 6, 533 +/- 3, and 552
+/- 10 mV for the wild-type and the Phe, Ile, and Trp mutant RCs, resp
ectively. These values are corroborated by chemical titrations. The fr
ee energy change (DELTAG-degrees) associated with formation of the P+H
L- radical pair from P also is determined by measuring the amplitude
of fluorescence on the nanosecond time scale after blocking electron t
ransfer from H(L)- to Q(A). The free energy of P+H(L)- is elevated by
an amount comparable to that calculated from the increase in the E(m)
of P in the Ile mutant and by about 16 meV more than this in the Phe a
nd Trp mutants. Nonadiabatic electron-transfer theory is used to relat
e the rate constant of the formation of P+H(L)- to DELTAG-degrees. The
altered temperature dependence of the reaction in the mutants cannot
be explained adequately on the assumption that the mutations only alte
r the overall DELTAG-degrees, but it can be accounted for by assuming
that they also increase the free energy of an additional state (P+B(L)
-) that serves as both a kinetic and a virtual intermediate. The requi
site increases in the free energy of P+B(L)- are greater than the meas
ured changes in the free energy of P+H(L)-. The P+Q(A)- --> PQ(A) back
-reaction speeds up with decreasing temperature in all four strains. A
t room temperature, this reaction has time constants of 0.105 +/- 0.01
, 0.100 +/- 0.005, 0.13 +/- 0.01, and 0.045 +/- 0.005 s in the wild-ty
pe and the Phe, Ile, and Trp mutant RCs, respectively. The large accel
eration in the Trp mutant cannot be explained simply in terms of the c
hange in DELTAG-degrees for this reaction.