G. Venturoli et al., ELECTRON-TRANSFER FROM CYTOCHROME-C(2) TO THE PRIMARY DONOR OF RHODOBACTER-SPHAEROIDES REACTION CENTERS - A TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE STUDY, Biochemistry, 32(48), 1993, pp. 13245-13253
Kinetics of flash-induced electron transfer from the soluble cytochrom
e c2 to the primary donor (P) of the reaction center purified from the
purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides R-26 were investigated by ti
me-resolved absorption spectroscopy. Re-reduction of P+ induced by a l
aser pulse was measured at 1283 nm both in isolated reaction centers a
nd in reconstituted proteoliposomes reproducing the lipid composition
of the native membrane. The effects of temperature (230-300 K) and of
the cytochrome c2/reaction center stoichiometry were examined. At room
temperature, over a wide range of cytochrome c2 to reaction center mo
lar ratios, the biphasic kinetics of cytochrome c2 oxidation in the mi
crosecond-to-millisecond time scale could be accurately described by a
minimum reaction scheme which includes a second-order collisional pro
cess (k = 1.4 X 10(9) M-1 s-1 and k = 2.4 X 10(9) M-1 s-1 in isolated
and reconstituted reaction centers, respectively) and a first-order in
tracomplex electron donation (t1/2 = 590 +/- 110 ns in isolated reacti
on centers; t1/2 = 930 +/- 140 ns in proteoliposomes). At cytochrome C
2 to reaction center molar ratios exceeding 5, the monomolecular proce
ss almost completely accounts for P+ re-reduction. At lower stoichiome
tries, the relative contribution of the two parallel reaction pathways
is modulated by a single binding equilibrium between cytochrome c2 an
d reaction centers, yielding a binding constant of 3.5 X 10(5) M-1 in
both systems. In the 230-300 K range, the kinetics of the mono- and bi
molecular reactions are markedly affected by temperature, following Ar
rhenius behavior with activation energies of 4.9-5.8 and 6.5 kcal mol-
1, respectively. At low temperature, in isolated reaction centers (but
not in the reconstituted system), a minor microsecond phase of P+ re-
reduction was detected, attributed to formation of the triplet-state P
-3. Upon lowering the temperature, the relative contribution of the fa
st monomolecular oxidation of cytochrome c2 decreased rather abruptly
below 260 K and essentially vanished at 230 K. Mechanisms leading to t
his dramatic impairment are discussed in relation to medium reorganiza
tion coupled to electron transfer. A reorganization energy of 25 kJ mo
l-1 has been estimated for electron donation within the cytochrome c2-
reaction center complex.